Inverse C-arm positioning for interventional procedures using real-time body part detection

C Schaller, C Rohkohl, J Penne, M Stürmer… - … Conference on Medical …, 2009 - Springer
C Schaller, C Rohkohl, J Penne, M Stürmer, J Hornegger
International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted …, 2009Springer
The automation and speedup of interventional therapy and diagnostic workflows is a crucial
issue. One way to improve these workflows is to accelerate the image acquisition
procedures by fully automating the patient setup. This paper describes a system that
performs this task without the use of markers or other prior assumptions. It returns metric
coordinates of the 3-D body shape in real-time for inverse positioning. This is achieved by
the application of an emerging technology, called Time-of-Flight (ToF) sensor. A ToF sensor …
Abstract
The automation and speedup of interventional therapy and diagnostic workflows is a crucial issue. One way to improve these workflows is to accelerate the image acquisition procedures by fully automating the patient setup. This paper describes a system that performs this task without the use of markers or other prior assumptions. It returns metric coordinates of the 3-D body shape in real-time for inverse positioning. This is achieved by the application of an emerging technology, called Time-of-Flight (ToF) sensor. A ToF sensor is a cost-efficient, off-the-shelf camera which provides more than 40,000 3-D points in real-time. The first contribution of this paper is the incorporation of this novel imaging technology (ToF) in interventional imaging. The second contribution is the ability of a C-arm system to position itself with respect to the patient prior to the acquisition. We are using the 3-D surface information of the patient to partition the body into anatomical sections. This is achieved by a fast two-stage classification process. The system computes the ISO-center for each detected region. To verify our system we performed several tests on the ISO-center of the head. Firstly, the reproducibility of the head ISO-center computation was evaluated. We achieved an accuracy of (x: 1.73±1.11 mm/y: 1.87±1.31 mm/z: 2.91±2.62 mm). Secondly, a C-arm head scan of a body phantom was setup. Our system automatically aligned the ISO-center of the head with the C-arm ISO-center. Here we achieved an accuracy of ± 1 cm, which is within the accuracy of the patient table control.
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