Title :
Intraoperative Magnetic Tracker Calibration Using a Magneto-Optic Hybrid Tracker for 3-D Ultrasound-Based Navigation in Laparoscopic Surgery
Author :
Nakamoto, Masahiko ; Nakada, Kazuhisa ; Sato, Yoshinobu ; Konishi, Kozo ; Hashizume, Makoto ; Tamura, Shinichi
Author_Institution :
Osaka Univ., Osaka
Abstract :
This paper describes a ultrasound (3D US) system that aims to achieve augmented reality (AR) visualization during laparoscopic surgery, especially for the liver. To acquire 3D US data of the liver, the tip of a laparoscopic ultrasound probe is tracked inside the abdominal cavity using a magnetic tracker. The accuracy of magnetic trackers, however, is greatly affected by magnetic field distortion that results from the close proximity of metal objects and electronic equipment, which is usually unavoidable in the operating room. In this paper, we describe a calibration method for intraoperative magnetic distortion that can be applied to laparoscopic 3D US data acquisition; we evaluate the accuracy and feasibility of the method by in vitro and in vivo experiments. Although calibration data can be acquired freehand using a magneto-optic hybrid tracker, there are two problems associated with this method - error caused by the time delay between measurements of the optical and magnetic trackers, and instability of the calibration accuracy that results from the uniformity and density of calibration data. A temporal calibration procedure is developed to estimate the time delay, which is then integrated into the calibration, and a distortion model is formulated by zeroth-degree to fourth-degree polynomial fitting to the calibration data. In the in vivo experiment using a pig, the positional error caused by magnetic distortion was reduced from 44.1 to 2.9 mm. The standard deviation of corrected target positions was less than 1.0 mm. Freehand acquisition of calibration data was performed smoothly using a magneto-optic hybrid sampling tool through a trocar under guidance by realtime 3-D monitoring of the tool trajectory; data acquisition time was less than 2 min. The present study suggests that our proposed method could correct for magnetic field distortion inside the patient´s abdomen during a laparoscopic procedure within a clinically permissible period of time, as well as ena- - bling an accurate 3D US reconstruction to be obtained that can be superimposed onto live endoscopic images.
Keywords :
augmented reality; biomedical optical imaging; biomedical ultrasonics; calibration; data acquisition; endoscopes; liver; magneto-optical devices; surgery; 3-D ultrasound-based navigation; augmented reality; data acquisition; endoscopic image reconstruction; intraoperative magnetic tracker calibration; laparoscopic surgery; liver; magneto-optic hybrid tracker; Abdomen; Calibration; Data acquisition; In vivo; Laparoscopes; Liver; Magnetic fields; Minimally invasive surgery; Navigation; Ultrasonic imaging; Accuracy validation; accuracy validation; computer-assisted surgery; intra-body tracking; intrabody tracking; laparoscopic ultrasound; magnetic field distortion; temporal calibration; Calibration; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Japan; Laparoscopes; Laparoscopy; Magnetics; Optics; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Surgery, Computer-Assisted; Ultrasonography;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2007.911003