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Dive into the research topics where Giulio Dagnino is active.

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Featured researches published by Giulio Dagnino.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2015

Preliminary analysis of force-torque measurements for robot-assisted fracture surgery

Ioannis Georgilas; Giulio Dagnino; Payam Tarassoli; Roger Atkins; Sanja Dogramadzi

Our group at Bristol Robotics Laboratory has been working on a new robotic system for fracture surgery that has been previously reported [1]. The robotic system is being developed for distal femur fractures and features a robot that manipulates the small fracture fragments through small percutaneous incisions and a robot that re-aligns the long bones. The robots controller design relies on accurate and bounded force and position parameters for which we require real surgical data. This paper reports preliminary findings of forces and torques applied during bone and soft tissue manipulation in typical orthopaedic surgery procedures. Using customised orthopaedic surgical tools we have collected data from a range of orthopaedic surgical procedures at Bristol Royal Infirmary, UK. Maximum forces and torques encountered during fracture manipulation which involved proximal femur and soft tissue distraction around it and reduction of neck of femur fractures have been recorded and further analysed in conjunction with accompanying image recordings. Using this data we are establishing a set of technical requirements for creating safe and dynamically stable minimally invasive robot-assisted fracture surgery (RAFS) systems.


international conference on robotics and automation | 2013

Imaging based metrics for performance assessment in laser phonomicrosurgery

Nikhil Deshpande; Leonardo S. Mattos; Giacinto Barresi; Andrea Brogni; Giulio Dagnino; Luca Guastini; Giorgio Peretti; Darwin G. Caldwell

State-of-the-art laser phonomicrosurgery (LP) used for the treatment of laryngeal abnormalities involves complex otolaryngological surgical techniques. It relies heavily on surgeon dexterity, requiring significant psychomotor skills. Equipment scale and size, laser operative distance, and the anatomically small nature of the vocal folds all combine to compound the surgical challenges. An objective measurement is therefore necessary to understand the impact of equipment design, its usability, surgeon skill, and learning, on performing LP effectively. This paper introduces imaging based feature extraction as a method to establish metrics to assess surgical performance in LP. Experimental analysis demonstrates the utility of these metrics in measuring surgical task execution vis-à-vis the task objectives. The metrics also provide for a combined rating scale giving a robust quantitative classification of the levels of surgical performance.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2015

Design and real-time control of a robotic system for fracture manipulation.

Giulio Dagnino; Ioannis Georgilas; Payam Tarassoli; Roger Atkins; Sanja Dogramadzi

This paper presents the design, development and control of a new robotic system for fracture manipulation. The objective is to improve the precision, ergonomics and safety of the traditional surgical procedure to treat joint fractures. The achievements toward this direction are here reported and include the design, the real-time control architecture and the evaluation of a new robotic manipulator system. The robotic manipulator is a 6-DOF parallel robot with the struts developed as linear actuators. The control architecture is also described here. The high-level controller implements a host-target structure composed by a host computer (PC), a real-time controller, and an FPGA. A graphical user interface was designed allowing the surgeon to comfortably automate and monitor the robotic system. The real-time controller guarantees the determinism of the control algorithms adding an extra level of safety for the robotic automation. The systems positioning accuracy and repeatability have been demonstrated showing a maximum positioning RMSE of 1.18 ± 1.14mm (translations) and 1.85 ± 1.54° (rotations).


international conference on robotics and automation | 2016

Image-based robotic system for enhanced minimally invasive intra-articular fracture surgeries

Giulio Dagnino; Ioannis Georgilas; Paul Köhler; Roger Atkins; Sanja Dogramadzi

Robotic assistance can bring significant improvements to orthopedic fracture surgery: facilitate more accurate fracture fragment repositioning without open access and obviate problems related to the current minimally invasive fracture surgery techniques by providing a better clinical outcome, reduced recovery time, and health-related costs. This paper presents a new design of the robot-assisted fracture surgery (RAFS) system developed at Bristol Robotics Laboratory, featuring a new robotic architecture, and real-time 3D imaging of the fractured anatomy. The technology presented in this paper focuses on distal femur fractures, but can be adapted to the larger domain of fracture surgeries, improving the state-of-the-art in robot assistance in orthopedics. To demonstrate the enhanced performance of the RAFS system, 10 reductions of a distal femur fracture are performed using the system on a bone model. The experimental results clearly demonstrate the accuracy, effectiveness, and safety of the new RAFS system. The system allows the surgeon to precisely reduce the fractures with a reduction accuracy of 1.15 mm and 1.3°, meeting the clinical requirements for this procedure.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2015

Powered exoskeleton with palm degrees of freedom for hand rehabilitation.

Daniel Stephen Richards; Ioannis Georgilas; Giulio Dagnino; Sanja Dogramadzi

Robotic rehabilitation is a currently underutilised field with the potential to allow huge cost savings within healthcare. Existing rehabilitation exoskeletons oversimplify the importance of movement of the hand while undertaking everyday tasks. Within this study, an investigation was undertaken to establish the extent to which the degrees of freedom within the palm affect ability to undertake everyday tasks. Using a 5DT data glove, bend sensing resistors and restrictors of palm movement, 20 participants were recruited to complete tasks that required various hand shapes. Collected data was processed and palm arching trends were identified for each grasping task. It was found that the extent of utilizing arches in the palm varied with each exercise, but was extensively employed throughout. An exoskeleton was subsequently designed with consideration of the identified palm shapes. This design included a number of key features that accommodated for a variety of hand sizes, a novel thumb joint and a series of dorsally mounted servos. Initial exoskeleton testing was undertaken by having a participant complete the same exercises while wearing the exoskeleton. The angles formed by the user during this process were then compared to those recorded by 2 other participants who had completed the same tasks without exoskeleton. It was found that the exoskeleton was capable of forming the required arches for completing the tasks, with differences between participants attributed to individual ergonomic differences.


computer assisted radiology and surgery | 2017

Intra-operative fiducial-based CT/fluoroscope image registration framework for image-guided robot-assisted joint fracture surgery

Giulio Dagnino; Ioannis Georgilas; Samir Morad; Peter Gibbons; Payam Tarassoli; Roger Atkins; Sanja Dogramadzi

PurposeJoint fractures must be accurately reduced minimising soft tissue damages to avoid negative surgical outcomes. To this regard, we have developed the RAFS surgical system, which allows the percutaneous reduction of intra-articular fractures and provides intra-operative real-time 3D image guidance to the surgeon. Earlier experiments showed the effectiveness of the RAFS system on phantoms, but also key issues which precluded its use in a clinical application. This work proposes a redesign of the RAFS’s navigation system overcoming the earlier version’s issues, aiming to move the RAFS system into a surgical environment.MethodsThe navigation system is improved through an image registration framework allowing the intra-operative registration between pre-operative CT images and intra-operative fluoroscopic images of a fractured bone using a custom-made fiducial marker. The objective of the registration is to estimate the relative pose between a bone fragment and an orthopaedic manipulation pin inserted into it intra-operatively. The actual pose of the bone fragment can be updated in real time using an optical tracker, enabling the image guidance.ResultsExperiments on phantom and cadavers demonstrated the accuracy and reliability of the registration framework, showing a reduction accuracy (sTRE) of about


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2018

Robot-Assisted Fracture Surgery: Surgical Requirements and System Design

Ioannis Georgilas; Giulio Dagnino; Payam Tarassoli; Roger Atkins; Sanja Dogramadzi


international conference on robotics and automation | 2017

RAFS: A computer-assisted robotic system for minimally invasive joint fracture surgery, based on pre- and intra-operative imaging

Giulio Dagnino; Ioannis Georgilas; Samir Morad; Peter Gibbons; Payam Tarassoli; Roger Atkins; Sanja Dogramadzi

0.88~\pm 0.2\,\hbox {mm}


Journal of Medical Robotics Research | 2017

Safe human-robot interaction in medical robotics: a case study on Robotic Fracture Surgery System

Ioannis Georgilas; Giulio Dagnino; Sanja Dogramadzi


computer assisted radiology and surgery | 2016

Vision-based real-time position control of a semi-automated system for robot-assisted joint fracture surgery.

Giulio Dagnino; Ioannis Georgilas; Payam Tarassoli; Roger Atkins; Sanja Dogramadzi

0.88±0.2mm (phantom) and

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Ioannis Georgilas

University of the West of England

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Sanja Dogramadzi

University of the West of England

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Roger Atkins

Bristol Royal Infirmary

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Samir Morad

University of the West of England

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Peter Gibbons

University of the West of England

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Paul Köhler

University of the West of England

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Darwin G. Caldwell

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Leonardo S. Mattos

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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