4 research outputs found

    Towards fluoro-free interventions: Using radial intracardiac ultrasound for vascular navigation

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    Transcatheter cardio-vascular interventions have the advantage of patient safety,reduced surgery time, and minimal trauma to the patient\u27s body. Transcathetherinterventions, which are performed percutaneously, suffer from the lack of direct line-of-sight with the surgical tools and the patient anatomy. Therefore, such interventionalprocedures rely heavily on image guidance for navigating towards and deliveringtherapy at the target site. Vascular navigation via the inferior vena cava (IVC), from thegroin to the heart, is an imperative part of most transcatheter cardiovascularinterventions such as valve repair surgeries and ablation therapy. Traditionally, the IVCis navigated using fluoroscopic techniques such as angiography or CT venography.These X-ray based techniques can have detrimental effects on the patient as well asthe surgical team, causing increased radiation exposure, increased risk of cancer, fetaldefects, eye cataracts. The use of heavy lead apron has also been reported to causeback pain and spine issues thus leading to interventionalist’s disc disease. We proposethe use of a catheter-based ultrasound augmented with electromagnetic (EM) trackingtechnology to generate a vascular roadmap in real-time and perform navigation withoutharmful radiation. In this pilot study, we use intracardiac echocardiography (ICE) and tracking technology to reconstruct a vessel from a phantom in a 3D virtual space. Thispaper presents a pilot phantom study on ICE-based vessel reconstruction anddemonstrates how the proposed ultrasound-based navigation will appear in a virtualspace, by navigating a tracked guidewire within the vessels in the phantom without anyradiation-based imaging. The geometric accuracy is assessed using a CT scan of thephantom, with a Dice coefficient of 0.79. The average distance between the surface ofthe two models comes out to be 1.7 ± 1.12mm

    Intracardiac Ultrasound Guided Systems for Transcatheter Cardiac Interventions

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    Transcatheter cardiac interventions are characterized by their percutaneous nature, increased patient safety, and low hospitalization times. Transcatheter procedures involve two major stages: navigation towards the target site and the positioning of tools to deliver the therapy, during which the interventionalists face the challenge of visualizing the anatomy and the relative position of the tools such as a guidewire. Fluoroscopic and transesophageal ultrasound (TEE) imaging are the most used techniques in cardiac procedures; however, they possess the disadvantage of radiation exposure and suboptimal imaging. This work explores the potential of intracardiac ultrasound (ICE) within an image guidance system (IGS) to facilitate the two stages of cardiac interventions. First, a novel 2.5D side-firing, conical Foresight ICE probe (Conavi Medical Inc., Toronto) is characterized, calibrated, and tracked using an electromagnetic sensor. The results indicate an acceptable tracking accuracy within some limitations. Next, an IGS is developed for navigating the vessels without fluoroscopy. A forward-looking, tracked ICE probe is used to reconstruct the vessel on a phantom which mimics the ultrasound imaging of an animal vena cava. Deep learning methods are employed to segment the complex vessel geometry from ICE imaging for the first time. The ICE-reconstructed vessel showed a clinically acceptable range of accuracy. Finally, a guidance system was developed to facilitate the positioning of tools during a tricuspid valve repair. The designed system potentially facilitates the positioning of the TriClip at the coaptation gap by pre-mapping the corresponding site of regurgitation in 3D tracking space

    Fusion of interventional ultrasound & X-ray

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    In einer immer älter werdenden Bevölkerung wird die Behandlung von strukturellen Herzkrankheiten zunehmend wichtiger. Verbesserte medizinische Bildgebung und die Einführung neuer Kathetertechnologien führten dazu, dass immer mehr herkömmliche chirurgische Eingriffe am offenen Herzen durch minimal invasive Methoden abgelöst werden. Diese modernen Interventionen müssen durch verschiedenste Bildgebungsverfahren navigiert werden. Hierzu werden hauptsächlich Röntgenfluoroskopie und transösophageale Echokardiografie (TEE) eingesetzt. Röntgen bietet eine gute Visualisierung der eingeführten Katheter, was essentiell für eine gute Navigation ist. TEE hingegen bietet die Möglichkeit der Weichteilgewebedarstellung und kann damit vor allem zur Darstellung von anatomischen Strukturen, wie z.B. Herzklappen, genutzt werden. Beide Modalitäten erzeugen Bilder in Echtzeit und werden für die erfolgreiche Durchführung minimal invasiver Herzchirurgie zwingend benötigt. Üblicherweise sind beide Systeme eigenständig und nicht miteinander verbunden. Es ist anzunehmen, dass eine Bildfusion beider Welten einen großen Vorteil für die behandelnden Operateure erzeugen kann, vor allem eine verbesserte Kommunikation im Behandlungsteam. Ebenso können sich aus der Anwendung heraus neue chirurgische Worfklows ergeben. Eine direkte Fusion beider Systeme scheint nicht möglich, da die Bilddaten eine zu unterschiedliche Charakteristik aufweisen. Daher kommt in dieser Arbeit eine indirekte Registriermethode zum Einsatz. Die TEE-Sonde ist während der Intervention ständig im Fluoroskopiebild sichtbar. Dadurch wird es möglich, die Sonde im Röntgenbild zu registrieren und daraus die 3D Position abzuleiten. Der Zusammenhang zwischen Ultraschallbild und Ultraschallsonde wird durch eine Kalibrierung bestimmt. In dieser Arbeit wurde die Methode der 2D-3D Registrierung gewählt, um die TEE Sonde auf 2D Röntgenbildern zu erkennen. Es werden verschiedene Beiträge präsentiert, welche einen herkömmlichen 2D-3D Registrieralgorithmus verbessern. Nicht nur im Bereich der Ultraschall-Röntgen-Fusion, sondern auch im Hinblick auf allgemeine Registrierprobleme. Eine eingeführte Methode ist die der planaren Parameter. Diese verbessert die Robustheit und die Registriergeschwindigkeit, vor allem während der Registrierung eines Objekts aus zwei nicht-orthogonalen Richtungen. Ein weiterer Ansatz ist der Austausch der herkömmlichen Erzeugung von sogenannten digital reconstructed radiographs. Diese sind zwar ein integraler Bestandteil einer 2D-3D Registrierung aber gleichzeitig sehr zeitaufwendig zu berechnen. Es führt zu einem erheblichen Geschwindigkeitsgewinn die herkömmliche Methode durch schnelles Rendering von Dreiecksnetzen zu ersetzen. Ebenso wird gezeigt, dass eine Kombination von schnellen lernbasierten Detektionsalgorithmen und 2D-3D Registrierung die Genauigkeit und die Registrierreichweite verbessert. Zum Abschluss werden die ersten Ergebnisse eines klinischen Prototypen präsentiert, welcher die zuvor genannten Methoden verwendet.Today, in an elderly community, the treatment of structural heart disease will become more and more important. Constant improvements of medical imaging technologies and the introduction of new catheter devices caused the trend to replace conventional open heart surgery by minimal invasive interventions. These advanced interventions need to be guided by different medical imaging modalities. The two main imaging systems here are X-ray fluoroscopy and Transesophageal  Echocardiography (TEE). While X-ray provides a good visualization of inserted catheters, which is essential for catheter navigation, TEE can display soft tissues, especially anatomical structures like heart valves. Both modalities provide real-time imaging and are necessary to lead minimal invasive heart surgery to success. Usually, the two systems are detached and not connected. It is conceivable that a fusion of both worlds can create a strong benefit for the physicians. It can lead to a better communication within the clinical team and can probably enable new surgical workflows. Because of the completely different characteristics of the image data, a direct fusion seems to be impossible. Therefore, an indirect registration of Ultrasound and X-ray images is used. The TEE probe is usually visible in the X-ray image during the described minimal-invasive interventions. Thereby, it becomes possible to register the TEE probe in the fluoroscopic images and to establish its 3D position. The relationship of the Ultrasound image to the Ultrasound probe is known by calibration. To register the TEE probe on 2D X-ray images, a 2D-3D registration approach is chosen in this thesis. Several contributions are presented, which are improving the common 2D-3D registration algorithm for the task of Ultrasound and X-ray fusion, but also for general 2D-3D registration problems. One presented approach is the introduction of planar parameters that increase robustness and speed during the registration of an object on two non-orthogonal views. Another approach is to replace the conventional generation of digital reconstructedradiographs, which is an integral part of 2D-3D registration but also a performance bottleneck, with fast triangular mesh rendering. This will result in a significant performance speed-up. It is also shown that a combination of fast learning-based detection algorithms with 2D-3D registration will increase the accuracy and the capture range, instead of employing them solely to the  registration/detection of a TEE probe. Finally, a first clinical prototype is presented which employs the presented approaches and first clinical results are shown

    The Role of Visualization, Force Feedback, and Augmented Reality in Minimally Invasive Heart Valve Repair

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    New cardiovascular techniques have been developed to address the unique requirements of high risk, elderly, surgical patients with heart valve disease by avoiding both sternotomy and cardiopulmonary bypass. However, these technologies pose new challenges in visualization, force application, and intracardiac navigation. Force feedback and augmented reality (AR) can be applied to minimally invasive mitral valve repair and transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) techniques to potentially surmount these challenges. Our study demonstrated shorter operative times with three dimensional (3D) visualization compared to two dimensional (2D) visualization; however, both experts and novices applied significantly more force to cardiac tissue during 3D robotics-assisted mitral valve annuloplasty than during conventional open mitral valve annuloplasty. This finding suggests that 3D visualization does not fully compensate for the absence of haptic feedback in robotics-assisted cardiac surgery. Subsequently, using an innovative robotics-assisted surgical system design, we determined that direct haptic feedback may improve both expert and trainee performance using robotics-assisted techniques. We determined that during robotics-assisted mitral valve annuloplasty the use of either visual or direct force feedback resulted in a significant decrease in forces applied to cardiac tissue when compared to robotics-assisted mitral valve annuloplasty without force feedback. We presented NeoNav, an AR-enhanced echocardiograpy intracardiac guidance system for NeoChord off-pump mitral valve repair. Our study demonstrated superior tool navigation accuracy, significantly shorter navigation times, and reduced potential for injury with AR enhanced intracardiac navigation for off-pump transapical mitral valve repair with neochordae implantation. In addition, we applied the NeoNav system as a safe and inexpensive alternative imaging modality for TAVI guidance. We found that our proposed AR guidance system may achieve similar or better results than the current standard of care, contrast enhanced fluoroscopy, while eliminating the use of nephrotoxic contrast and ionizing radiation. These results suggest that the addition of both force feedback and augmented reality image guidance can improve both surgical performance and safety during minimally invasive robotics assisted and beating heart valve surgery, respectively
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