DocumentCode
19586
Title
Comparative Validation of Single-Shot Optical Techniques for Laparoscopic 3-D Surface Reconstruction
Author
Maier-Hein, L. ; Groch, A. ; Bartoli, Alberto ; Bodenstedt, S. ; Boissonnat, G. ; Chang, P.-L. ; Clancy, N.T. ; Elson, D.S. ; Haase, S. ; Heim, E. ; Hornegger, Joachim ; Jannin, P. ; Kenngott, H. ; Kilgus, T. ; Muller-Stich, B. ; Oladokun, D. ; Rohl, S. ;
Author_Institution
Junior Group Comput.-Assisted Interventions, German Cancer Res. Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany
Volume
33
Issue
10
fYear
2014
fDate
Oct. 2014
Firstpage
1913
Lastpage
1930
Abstract
Intra-operative imaging techniques for obtaining the shape and morphology of soft-tissue surfaces in vivo are a key enabling technology for advanced surgical systems. Different optical techniques for 3-D surface reconstruction in laparoscopy have been proposed, however, so far no quantitative and comparative validation has been performed. Furthermore, robustness of the methods to clinically important factors like smoke or bleeding has not yet been assessed. To address these issues, we have formed a joint international initiative with the aim of validating different state-of-the-art passive and active reconstruction methods in a comparative manner. In this comprehensive in vitro study, we investigated reconstruction accuracy using different organs with various shape and texture and also tested reconstruction robustness with respect to a number of factors like the pose of the endoscope as well as the amount of blood or smoke present in the scene. The study suggests complementary advantages of the different techniques with respect to accuracy, robustness, point density, hardware complexity and computation time. While reconstruction accuracy under ideal conditions was generally high, robustness is a remaining issue to be addressed. Future work should include sensor fusion and in vivo validation studies in a specific clinical context. To trigger further research in surface reconstruction, stereoscopic data of the study will be made publically available at www.open-CAS.com upon publication of the paper.
Keywords
biological tissues; biomedical optical imaging; blood; endoscopes; image reconstruction; image texture; medical image processing; sensor fusion; stereo image processing; surface morphology; surface reconstruction; surgery; active reconstruction methods; computation time; endoscope; hardware complexity; in vivo soft-tissue surface morphology; intraoperative imaging; laparoscopic 3-D surface reconstruction; passive reconstruction methods; point density; sensor fusion; single-shot optical techniques; specific clinical context; stereoscopic data; surgical systems; texture; Endoscopes; Image reconstruction; Reconstruction algorithms; Robustness; Surface reconstruction; Surgery; Three-dimensional displays; Biomedical imaging; endoscopes; optical imaging; stereo image processing; stereo vision; surgery;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0062
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMI.2014.2325607
Filename
6820756
Link To Document