Title :
Reliable navigation for virtual endoscopy
Author :
He, Taosong ; Hong, Lichan
Author_Institution :
Bell Labs., Lucent Technol., Naperville, IL, USA
Abstract :
Virtual endoscopy provides a computerized, non-invasive procedure for detecting anomalies inside human organs. Several preliminary studies have demonstrated the benefits and effectiveness of such a modality. Unfortunately, previous work can not guarantee that an existing anomaly be detected, and it does not provide an effective navigation method for examining complex organs with multiple branches. Here, the authors introduce the concept of reliable navigation that ensures the interior organ surface is fully examined by the physician performing the virtual endoscopy procedure. To achieve this, the authors first locate inside the hollow organ a small set of center observation points. For each observation point, there exists at least one patch of interior surface visible to it that can not be seen from any of the other observation points. The authors then link these chosen points with a path that stays in the center of the organ. Finally, they recursively select new points inside the organ and connect them into the path until the entire organ surface is visible from the path. During the navigation, the physician´s movement is restricted to this automatically computed path, while he can use an intuitive and zoomable camera to explore the surface detail. The authors present an encouraging result from their experiments on an airway data
Keywords :
biological organs; medical image processing; virtual reality; anomalies inside human organs detection; interior organ surface; interior surface patch; medical diagnostic imaging; reliable navigation; surface detail; virtual endoscopy procedure; zoomable camera; Biological system modeling; Cameras; Endoscopes; Humans; Magnetic resonance imaging; Navigation; Physics computing; Surface reconstruction; Switches; Visualization;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium, 1999. Conference Record. 1999 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5696-9
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.1999.842804