107 research outputs found
A Markov Random Field Based Approach to 3D Mosaicing and Registration Applied to Ultrasound Simulation
A novel Markov Random Field (MRF) based method for the mosaicing of 3D ultrasound volumes is presented in this dissertation. The motivation for this work is the production of training volumes for an affordable ultrasound simulator, which offers a low-cost/portable training solution for new users of diagnostic ultrasound, by providing the scanning experience essential for developing the necessary psycho-motor skills. It also has the potential for introducing ultrasound instruction into medical education curriculums. The interest in ultrasound training stems in part from the widespread adoption of point-of-care scanners, i.e. low cost portable ultrasound scanning systems in the medical community.
This work develops a novel approach for producing 3D composite image volumes and validates the approach using clinically acquired fetal images from the obstetrics department at the University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS). Results using the Visible Human Female dataset as well as an abdominal trauma phantom are also presented. The process is broken down into five distinct steps, which include individual 3D volume acquisition, rigid registration, calculation of a mosaicing function, group-wise non-rigid registration, and finally blending. Each of these steps, common in medical image processing, has been investigated in the context of ultrasound mosaicing and has resulted in improved algorithms. Rigid and non-rigid registration methods are analyzed in a probabilistic framework and their sensitivity to ultrasound shadowing artifacts is studied.
The group-wise non-rigid registration problem is initially formulated as a maximum likelihood estimation, where the joint probability density function is comprised of the partially overlapping ultrasound image volumes. This expression is simplified using a block-matching methodology and the resulting discrete registration energy is shown to be equivalent to a Markov Random Field. Graph based methods common in computer vision are then used for optimization, resulting in a set of transformations that bring the overlapping volumes into alignment. This optimization is parallelized using a fusion approach, where the registration problem is divided into 8 independent sub-problems whose solutions are fused together at the end of each iteration. This method provided a speedup factor of 3.91 over the single threaded approach with no noticeable reduction in accuracy during our simulations. Furthermore, the registration problem is simplified by introducing a mosaicing function, which partitions the composite volume into regions filled with data from unique partially overlapping source volumes. This mosaicing functions attempts to minimize intensity and gradient differences between adjacent sources in the composite volume.
Experimental results to demonstrate the performance of the group-wise registration algorithm are also presented. This algorithm is initially tested on deformed abdominal image volumes generated using a finite element model of the Visible Human Female to show the accuracy of its calculated displacement fields. In addition, the algorithm is evaluated using real ultrasound data from an abdominal phantom. Finally, composite obstetrics image volumes are constructed using clinical scans of pregnant subjects, where fetal movement makes registration/mosaicing especially difficult.
Our solution to blending, which is the final step of the mosaicing process, is also discussed. The trainee will have a better experience if the volume boundaries are visually seamless, and this usually requires some blending prior to stitching. Also, regions of the volume where no data was collected during scanning should have an ultrasound-like appearance before being displayed in the simulator. This ensures the trainee\u27s visual experience isn\u27t degraded by unrealistic images. A discrete Poisson approach has been adapted to accomplish these tasks. Following this, we will describe how a 4D fetal heart image volume can be constructed from swept 2D ultrasound. A 4D probe, such as the Philips X6-1 xMATRIX Array, would make this task simpler as it can acquire 3D ultrasound volumes of the fetal heart in real-time; However, probes such as these aren\u27t widespread yet.
Once the theory has been introduced, we will describe the clinical component of this dissertation. For the purpose of acquiring actual clinical ultrasound data, from which training datasets were produced, 11 pregnant subjects were scanned by experienced sonographers at the UMMS following an approved IRB protocol. First, we will discuss the software/hardware configuration that was used to conduct these scans, which included some custom mechanical design. With the data collected using this arrangement we generated seamless 3D fetal mosaics, that is, the training datasets, loaded them into our ultrasound training simulator, and then subsequently had them evaluated by the sonographers at the UMMS for accuracy. These mosaics were constructed from the raw scan data using the techniques previously introduced. Specific training objectives were established based on the input from our collaborators in the obstetrics sonography group. Important fetal measurements are reviewed, which form the basis for training in obstetrics ultrasound. Finally clinical images demonstrating the sonographer making fetal measurements in practice, which were acquired directly by the Philips iU22 ultrasound machine from one of our 11 subjects, are compared with screenshots of corresponding images produced by our simulator
A Markov Random Field Based Approach to 3D Mosaicing and Registration Applied to Ultrasound Simulation
A novel Markov Random Field (MRF) based method for the mosaicing of 3D ultrasound volumes is presented in this dissertation. The motivation for this work is the production of training volumes for an affordable ultrasound simulator, which offers a low-cost/portable training solution for new users of diagnostic ultrasound, by providing the scanning experience essential for developing the necessary psycho-motor skills. It also has the potential for introducing ultrasound instruction into medical education curriculums. The interest in ultrasound training stems in part from the widespread adoption of point-of-care scanners, i.e. low cost portable ultrasound scanning systems in the medical community.
This work develops a novel approach for producing 3D composite image volumes and validates the approach using clinically acquired fetal images from the obstetrics department at the University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS). Results using the Visible Human Female dataset as well as an abdominal trauma phantom are also presented. The process is broken down into five distinct steps, which include individual 3D volume acquisition, rigid registration, calculation of a mosaicing function, group-wise non-rigid registration, and finally blending. Each of these steps, common in medical image processing, has been investigated in the context of ultrasound mosaicing and has resulted in improved algorithms. Rigid and non-rigid registration methods are analyzed in a probabilistic framework and their sensitivity to ultrasound shadowing artifacts is studied.
The group-wise non-rigid registration problem is initially formulated as a maximum likelihood estimation, where the joint probability density function is comprised of the partially overlapping ultrasound image volumes. This expression is simplified using a block-matching methodology and the resulting discrete registration energy is shown to be equivalent to a Markov Random Field. Graph based methods common in computer vision are then used for optimization, resulting in a set of transformations that bring the overlapping volumes into alignment. This optimization is parallelized using a fusion approach, where the registration problem is divided into 8 independent sub-problems whose solutions are fused together at the end of each iteration. This method provided a speedup factor of 3.91 over the single threaded approach with no noticeable reduction in accuracy during our simulations. Furthermore, the registration problem is simplified by introducing a mosaicing function, which partitions the composite volume into regions filled with data from unique partially overlapping source volumes. This mosaicing functions attempts to minimize intensity and gradient differences between adjacent sources in the composite volume.
Experimental results to demonstrate the performance of the group-wise registration algorithm are also presented. This algorithm is initially tested on deformed abdominal image volumes generated using a finite element model of the Visible Human Female to show the accuracy of its calculated displacement fields. In addition, the algorithm is evaluated using real ultrasound data from an abdominal phantom. Finally, composite obstetrics image volumes are constructed using clinical scans of pregnant subjects, where fetal movement makes registration/mosaicing especially difficult.
Our solution to blending, which is the final step of the mosaicing process, is also discussed. The trainee will have a better experience if the volume boundaries are visually seamless, and this usually requires some blending prior to stitching. Also, regions of the volume where no data was collected during scanning should have an ultrasound-like appearance before being displayed in the simulator. This ensures the trainee\u27s visual experience isn\u27t degraded by unrealistic images. A discrete Poisson approach has been adapted to accomplish these tasks. Following this, we will describe how a 4D fetal heart image volume can be constructed from swept 2D ultrasound. A 4D probe, such as the Philips X6-1 xMATRIX Array, would make this task simpler as it can acquire 3D ultrasound volumes of the fetal heart in real-time; However, probes such as these aren\u27t widespread yet.
Once the theory has been introduced, we will describe the clinical component of this dissertation. For the purpose of acquiring actual clinical ultrasound data, from which training datasets were produced, 11 pregnant subjects were scanned by experienced sonographers at the UMMS following an approved IRB protocol. First, we will discuss the software/hardware configuration that was used to conduct these scans, which included some custom mechanical design. With the data collected using this arrangement we generated seamless 3D fetal mosaics, that is, the training datasets, loaded them into our ultrasound training simulator, and then subsequently had them evaluated by the sonographers at the UMMS for accuracy. These mosaics were constructed from the raw scan data using the techniques previously introduced. Specific training objectives were established based on the input from our collaborators in the obstetrics sonography group. Important fetal measurements are reviewed, which form the basis for training in obstetrics ultrasound. Finally clinical images demonstrating the sonographer making fetal measurements in practice, which were acquired directly by the Philips iU22 ultrasound machine from one of our 11 subjects, are compared with screenshots of corresponding images produced by our simulator
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Real-Time 4D Ultrasound Mosaicing and Visualization
Intra-cardiac 3D ultrasound imaging has enabled new minimally invasive procedures. Its narrow field of view, however, limits its efficacy in guiding beating heart procedures where geometrically complex and spatially extended moving anatomic structures are often involved. In this paper, we present a system that performs electrocardiograph gated 4D mosaicing and visualization of 3DUS volumes. Real-time operation is enabled by GPU implementation. The method is validated on phantom and porcine heart data.Engineering and Applied Science
Groupwise Multimodal Image Registration using Joint Total Variation
In medical imaging it is common practice to acquire a wide range of
modalities (MRI, CT, PET, etc.), to highlight different structures or
pathologies. As patient movement between scans or scanning session is
unavoidable, registration is often an essential step before any subsequent
image analysis. In this paper, we introduce a cost function based on joint
total variation for such multimodal image registration. This cost function has
the advantage of enabling principled, groupwise alignment of multiple images,
whilst being insensitive to strong intensity non-uniformities. We evaluate our
algorithm on rigidly aligning both simulated and real 3D brain scans. This
validation shows robustness to strong intensity non-uniformities and low
registration errors for CT/PET to MRI alignment. Our implementation is publicly
available at https://github.com/brudfors/coregistration-njtv
Medical Image Analysis using Deep Relational Learning
In the past ten years, with the help of deep learning, especially the rapid
development of deep neural networks, medical image analysis has made remarkable
progress. However, how to effectively use the relational information between
various tissues or organs in medical images is still a very challenging
problem, and it has not been fully studied. In this thesis, we propose two
novel solutions to this problem based on deep relational learning. First, we
propose a context-aware fully convolutional network that effectively models
implicit relation information between features to perform medical image
segmentation. The network achieves the state-of-the-art segmentation results on
the Multi Modal Brain Tumor Segmentation 2017 (BraTS2017) and Multi Modal Brain
Tumor Segmentation 2018 (BraTS2018) data sets. Subsequently, we propose a new
hierarchical homography estimation network to achieve accurate medical image
mosaicing by learning the explicit spatial relationship between adjacent
frames. We use the UCL Fetoscopy Placenta dataset to conduct experiments and
our hierarchical homography estimation network outperforms the other
state-of-the-art mosaicing methods while generating robust and meaningful
mosaicing result on unseen frames.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2007.0778
Autonomous Tissue Scanning under Free-Form Motion for Intraoperative Tissue Characterisation
In Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS), tissue scanning with imaging probes is
required for subsurface visualisation to characterise the state of the tissue.
However, scanning of large tissue surfaces in the presence of deformation is a
challenging task for the surgeon. Recently, robot-assisted local tissue
scanning has been investigated for motion stabilisation of imaging probes to
facilitate the capturing of good quality images and reduce the surgeon's
cognitive load. Nonetheless, these approaches require the tissue surface to be
static or deform with periodic motion. To eliminate these assumptions, we
propose a visual servoing framework for autonomous tissue scanning, able to
deal with free-form tissue deformation. The 3D structure of the surgical scene
is recovered and a feature-based method is proposed to estimate the motion of
the tissue in real-time. A desired scanning trajectory is manually defined on a
reference frame and continuously updated using projective geometry to follow
the tissue motion and control the movement of the robotic arm. The advantage of
the proposed method is that it does not require the learning of the tissue
motion prior to scanning and can deal with free-form deformation. We deployed
this framework on the da Vinci surgical robot using the da Vinci Research Kit
(dVRK) for Ultrasound tissue scanning. Since the framework does not rely on
information from the Ultrasound data, it can be easily extended to other
probe-based imaging modalities.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, ICRA 202
Enhanced Ultrasound Visualization for Procedure Guidance
Intra-cardiac procedures often involve fast-moving anatomic structures with large spatial extent and high geometrical complexity. Real-time visualization of the moving structures and instrument-tissue contact is crucial to the success of these procedures. Real-time 3D ultrasound is a promising modality for procedure guidance as it offers improved spatial orientation information relative to 2D ultrasound. Imaging rates at 30 fps enable good visualization of instrument-tissue interactions, far faster than the volumetric imaging alternatives (MR/CT). Unlike fluoroscopy, 3D ultrasound also allows better contrast of soft tissues, and avoids the use of ionizing radiation.Engineering and Applied Science
Optical techniques for 3D surface reconstruction in computer-assisted laparoscopic surgery
One of the main challenges for computer-assisted surgery (CAS) is to determine the intra-opera- tive morphology and motion of soft-tissues. This information is prerequisite to the registration of multi-modal patient-specific data for enhancing the surgeon’s navigation capabilites by observ- ing beyond exposed tissue surfaces and for providing intelligent control of robotic-assisted in- struments. In minimally invasive surgery (MIS), optical techniques are an increasingly attractive approach for in vivo 3D reconstruction of the soft-tissue surface geometry. This paper reviews the state-of-the-art methods for optical intra-operative 3D reconstruction in laparoscopic surgery and discusses the technical challenges and future perspectives towards clinical translation. With the recent paradigm shift of surgical practice towards MIS and new developments in 3D opti- cal imaging, this is a timely discussion about technologies that could facilitate complex CAS procedures in dynamic and deformable anatomical regions
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