12 research outputs found

    Segmentation, separation and pose estimation of prostate brachytherapy seeds in CT images.

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    International audienceIn this paper, we address the development of an automatic approach for the computation of pose information (position + orientation) of prostate brachytherapy loose seeds from 3D CT images. From an initial detection of a set of seed candidates in CT images using a threshold and connected component method, the orientation of each individual seed is estimated by using the principal components analysis (PCA) method. The main originality of this approach is the ability to classify the detected objects based on a priori intensity and volume information and to separate groups of closely spaced seeds using three competing clustering methods: the standard and a modified k-means method and a Gaussian mixture model with an Expectation-Maximization algorithm. Experiments were carried out on a series of CT images of two phantoms and patients. The fourteen patients correspond to a total of 1063 implanted seeds. Detections are compared to manual segmentation and to related work in terms of detection performance and calculation time. This automatic method has proved to be accurate and fast including the ability to separate groups of seeds in a reliable way and to determine the orientation of each seed. Such a method is mandatory to be able to compute precisely the real dose delivered to the patient post-operatively instead of assuming the alignment of seeds along the theoretical insertion direction of the brachytherapy needles

    Using CamiTK for rapid prototyping of interactive Computer Assisted Medical Intervention applications

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    Computer Assisted Medical Intervention (CAMI hereafter) is a complex multi-disciplinary field. CAMI research requires the collaboration of experts in several fields as diverse as medicine, computer science, mathematics, instrumentation, signal processing, mechanics, modeling, automatics, optics, etc

    Light Random Regression Forests for Automatic, Multi-Organ Localization in CT Images

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    International audienceClassic Random Regression Forests (RRFs) used for multi-organ localization describe the random process of multivari-ate regression by storing the histograms of offset vectors along each bounding wall direction per leaf node. On the one hand, the RAM and storage requirements of classic RRFs may become exorbitantly high when such a RRF consists of many leaf nodes, but on the other hand, a large number of leaf nodes are required for better localization. We introduce Light Random Regression Forests (LRRFs) which eliminate the need to describe the random process by formulating the localization prediction based on the random variables that describe the random process. Consequently, LRRFs with the same localization capabilities require less RAM and storage space compared to classic RRFs. LRRF comprising 4 trees with 17 decision levels is approximately 9 times faster, takes 10 times less RAM, and uses 30 times less storage space compared to a similar classic RRF

    Segmentation, separation and pose estimation of prostate brachytherapy seeds in CT images.

    No full text
    International audienceIn this paper, we address the development of an automatic approach for the computation of pose information (position + orientation) of prostate brachytherapy loose seeds from 3D CT images. From an initial detection of a set of seed candidates in CT images using a threshold and connected component method, the orientation of each individual seed is estimated by using the principal components analysis (PCA) method. The main originality of this approach is the ability to classify the detected objects based on a priori intensity and volume information and to separate groups of closely spaced seeds using three competing clustering methods: the standard and a modified k-means method and a Gaussian mixture model with an Expectation-Maximization algorithm. Experiments were carried out on a series of CT images of two phantoms and patients. The fourteen patients correspond to a total of 1063 implanted seeds. Detections are compared to manual segmentation and to related work in terms of detection performance and calculation time. This automatic method has proved to be accurate and fast including the ability to separate groups of seeds in a reliable way and to determine the orientation of each seed. Such a method is mandatory to be able to compute precisely the real dose delivered to the patient post-operatively instead of assuming the alignment of seeds along the theoretical insertion direction of the brachytherapy needles

    Segmentation, Separation and Pose Estimation of Prostate Brachytherapy Seeds in CT Images

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    LPR: A CT and MR-Compatible Puncture Robot to Enhance Accuracy and Safety of Image-Guided Interventions.

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