학술논문

Organ Surface Deformation Measurement and Analysis in Open Hepatic Surgery: Method and Preliminary Results From 12 Clinical Cases
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng. Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on. 58(8):2280-2289 Aug, 2011
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Liver
Computed tomography
Image segmentation
Tumors
Neurosurgery
Biological tissues
Image-guided surgery (IGS)
laser range scanning
open hepatic surgery
soft tissue deformation
Language
ISSN
0018-9294
1558-2531
Abstract
The incidence of soft tissue deformation has been well documented in neurosurgical procedures and is known to compromise the spatial accuracy of image-guided surgery systems. Within the context of image-guided liver surgery (IGLS), no detailed method to study and analyze the observed organ shape change between preoperative imaging and the intraoperative presentation has been developed. Contrary to the studies of deformation in neurosurgical procedures, the majority of deformation in IGLS is imposed prior to resection and due to laparotomy and mobilization. As such, methods of analyzing the organ shape change must be developed to use the intraoperative data [e.g., laser range scan (LRS) surfaces] acquired with the organ in its fully deformed shape. To achieve this end we use a signed closest point distance deformation metric computed after rigid alignment of the intraoperative LRS data with organ surfaces generated from the preoperative tomograms. The rigid alignment between the intraoperative LRS surfaces and preoperative image data was computed with a feature weighted surface registration algorithm. In order to compare the deformation metrics across patients, an interpatient nonrigid registration of the preoperative CT images was performed. Given the interpatient liver registrations, an analysis was performed to determine the potential similarities in the distribution of measured deformation between patients for which similar procedures had been performed. The results of the deformation measurement and analysis indicate the potential for soft tissue deformation to compromise surgical guidance information and suggests a similarity in imposed deformation among similar procedure types.