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Design of a Snake-like Robot for Rapid Injury Detection in Patients with Hemorrhagic Shock

  • Ran Shi
  • , Zhibin Li*
  • , Yunjiang Lou
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Shenzhen Polytechnic
  • Harbin Institute of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In the face of growing demand for emergency treatment in mass casualty incidents involving acute hemorrhagic shock, disaster sites often suffer from limited search and rescue manpower and inadequate medical detection capabilities. With the rapid development of robot technology, the deployment of robots provides greater flexibility and reliability in disaster emergency response and search and rescue work, which can effectively address the shortage of search and rescue forces and medical resources at disaster sites. This paper introduces a snake-like robot designed for the rapid triage of casualties with hemorrhagic shock. Through a structural design combining active wheels and orthogonal joints, the robot integrates the advantages of high-speed mobility of wheeled robots with the high flexibility of jointed robots so as to adapt to the complex environments typical of search and rescue scenarios. Meanwhile, the end of the robot is equipped with a visible light camera, an infrared camera and a voice interaction system, which realizes the rapid triage of casualties with hemorrhagic shock by collecting visible light, infrared and voice dialog data of the casualties. Through Webots software simulation and outdoor site simulation experiments, seven indicators of the designed snake-like search and rescue robot are verified, including walking speed, minimum passable hole size, climbing angle, obstacle-surmounting height, passable step size, ditch-crossing width and turning radius, as well as the effectiveness of collecting visible light images, infrared images and voice dialog data of the casualties.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9999
JournalApplied Sciences (Switzerland)
Volume15
Issue number18
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • in situ online triage
  • search and rescue robot
  • snake-like robot
  • triage of hemorrhagic shock

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