1,947 research outputs found

    Advancements and Breakthroughs in Ultrasound Imaging

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    Ultrasonic imaging is a powerful diagnostic tool available to medical practitioners, engineers and researchers today. Due to the relative safety, and the non-invasive nature, ultrasonic imaging has become one of the most rapidly advancing technologies. These rapid advances are directly related to the parallel advancements in electronics, computing, and transducer technology together with sophisticated signal processing techniques. This book focuses on state of the art developments in ultrasonic imaging applications and underlying technologies presented by leading practitioners and researchers from many parts of the world

    Image-based registration methods for quantification and compensation of prostate motion during trans-rectal ultrasound (TRUS)-guided biopsy

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    Prostate biopsy is the clinical standard for cancer diagnosis and is typically performed under two-dimensional (2D) transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) for needle guidance. Unfortunately, most early stage prostate cancers are not visible on ultrasound and the procedure suffers from high false negative rates due to the lack of visible targets. Fusion of pre-biopsy MRI to 3D TRUS for targeted biopsy could improve cancer detection rates and volume of tumor sampled. In MRI-TRUS fusion biopsy systems, patient or prostate motion during the procedure causes misalignments in the MR targets mapped to the live 2D TRUS images, limiting the targeting accuracy of the biopsy system. In order to sample smallest clinically significant tumours of 0.5 cm3with 95% confidence, the root mean square (RMS) error of the biopsy system needs to be The target misalignments due to intermittent prostate motion during the procedure can be compensated by registering the live 2D TRUS images acquired during the biopsy procedure to the pre-acquired baseline 3D TRUS image. The registration must be performed both accurately and quickly in order to be useful during the clinical procedure. We developed an intensity-based 2D-3D rigid registration algorithm and validated it by calculating the target registration error (TRE) using manually identified fiducials within the prostate. We discuss two different approaches that can be used to improve the robustness of this registration to meet the clinical requirements. Firstly, we evaluated the impact of intra-procedural 3D TRUS imaging on motion compensation accuracy since the limited anatomical context available in live 2D TRUS images could limit the robustness of the 2D-3D registration. The results indicated that TRE improved when intra-procedural 3D TRUS images were used in registration, with larger improvements in the base and apex regions as compared with the mid-gland region. Secondly, we developed and evaluated a registration algorithm whose optimization is based on learned prostate motion characteristics. Compared to our initial approach, the updated optimization improved the robustness during 2D-3D registration by reducing the number of registrations with a TRE \u3e 5 mm from 9.2% to 1.2% with an overall RMS TRE of 2.3 mm. The methods developed in this work were intended to improve the needle targeting accuracy of 3D TRUS-guided biopsy systems. The successful integration of the techniques into current 3D TRUS-guided systems could improve the overall cancer detection rate during the biopsy and help to achieve earlier diagnosis and fewer repeat biopsy procedures in prostate cancer diagnosis

    Prostate biopsy tracking with deformation estimation

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    Transrectal biopsies under 2D ultrasound (US) control are the current clinical standard for prostate cancer diagnosis. The isoechogenic nature of prostate carcinoma makes it necessary to sample the gland systematically, resulting in a low sensitivity. Also, it is difficult for the clinician to follow the sampling protocol accurately under 2D US control and the exact anatomical location of the biopsy cores is unknown after the intervention. Tracking systems for prostate biopsies make it possible to generate biopsy distribution maps for intra- and post-interventional quality control and 3D visualisation of histological results for diagnosis and treatment planning. They can also guide the clinician toward non-ultrasound targets. In this paper, a volume-swept 3D US based tracking system for fast and accurate estimation of prostate tissue motion is proposed. The entirely image-based system solves the patient motion problem with an a priori model of rectal probe kinematics. Prostate deformations are estimated with elastic registration to maximize accuracy. The system is robust with only 17 registration failures out of 786 (2%) biopsy volumes acquired from 47 patients during biopsy sessions. Accuracy was evaluated to 0.76±\pm0.52mm using manually segmented fiducials on 687 registered volumes stemming from 40 patients. A clinical protocol for assisted biopsy acquisition was designed and implemented as a biopsy assistance system, which allows to overcome the draw-backs of the standard biopsy procedure.Comment: Medical Image Analysis (2011) epub ahead of prin

    Hemodynamic Quantifications By Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound:From In-Vitro Modelling To Clinical Validation

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    Hemodynamic Quantifications By Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound:From In-Vitro Modelling To Clinical Validation

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    MR to Ultrasound Registration for Image-Guided Prostate Biopsy

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    Transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) guided prostate biopsy is the standard approach for diagnosis of prostate cancer (PCa). However, due to the lack of image contrast of prostate tumors, it often results in false negatives. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) has been considered to be a promising imaging modality for noninvasive identification of PCa, since it can provide a high sensitivity and specificity for the detection of early stage PCa. Our main objective is to develop a registration method of 3D MR-TRUS images, allowing generation of volumetric 3D maps of targets identified in 3D MR images to be biopsied using 3D TRUS images. We proposed an image-based non-rigid registration approach which employs the modality independent neighborhood descriptor (MIND) as the local similarity feature. An efficient duality-based convex optimization-based algorithmic scheme was introduced to extract the deformations. The registration accuracy was evaluated using 20 patient images by calculating the target registration error (TRE) using manually identified corresponding intrinsic fiducials. Additional performance metrics (DSC, MAD, and MAXD) were also calculated by comparing the MR and TRUS manually segmented prostate surfaces in the registered images. Experimental results showed that the proposed method yielded an overall median TRE of 1.76 mm. In addition, we proposed a surface-based registration method, which first makes use of an initial rigid registration of 3D MR to TRUS using 6 manually placed corresponding landmarks in each image. Following the manual initialization, two prostate surfaces are segmented from 3D MR and TRUS images and then non-rigidly registered using a thin-plate spline algorithm. The registration accuracy was evaluated using 17 patient images by measuring TRE. Experimental results show that the proposed method yielded an overall mean TRE of 2.24 mm, which is favorably comparable to a clinical requirement for an error of less than 2.5 mm

    Robotic System Development for Precision MRI-Guided Needle-Based Interventions

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    This dissertation describes the development of a methodology for implementing robotic systems for interventional procedures under intraoperative Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) guidance. MRI is an ideal imaging modality for surgical guidance of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, thanks to its ability to perform high resolution, real-time, and high soft tissue contrast imaging without ionizing radiation. However, the strong magnetic field and sensitivity to radio frequency signals, as well as tightly confined scanner bore render great challenges to developing robotic systems within MRI environment. Discussed are potential solutions to address engineering topics related to development of MRI-compatible electro-mechanical systems and modeling of steerable needle interventions. A robotic framework is developed based on a modular design approach, supporting varying MRI-guided interventional procedures, with stereotactic neurosurgery and prostate cancer therapy as two driving exemplary applications. A piezoelectrically actuated electro-mechanical system is designed to provide precise needle placement in the bore of the scanner under interactive MRI-guidance, while overcoming the challenges inherent to MRI-guided procedures. This work presents the development of the robotic system in the aspects of requirements definition, clinical work flow development, mechanism optimization, control system design and experimental evaluation. A steerable needle is beneficial for interventional procedures with its capability to produce curved path, avoiding anatomical obstacles or compensating for needle placement errors. Two kinds of steerable needles are discussed, i.e. asymmetric-tip needle and concentric-tube cannula. A novel Gaussian-based ContinUous Rotation and Variable-curvature (CURV) model is proposed to steer asymmetric-tip needle, which enables variable curvature of the needle trajectory with independent control of needle rotation and insertion. While concentric-tube cannula is suitable for clinical applications where a curved trajectory is needed without relying on tissue interaction force. This dissertation addresses fundamental challenges in developing and deploying MRI-compatible robotic systems, and enables the technologies for MRI-guided needle-based interventions. This study applied and evaluated these techniques to a system for prostate biopsy that is currently in clinical trials, developed a neurosurgery robot prototype for interstitial thermal therapy of brain cancer under MRI guidance, and demonstrated needle steering using both asymmetric tip and pre-bent concentric-tube cannula approaches on a testbed
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