SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR IMAGE LOCALIZATION OF EFFECTERS DURING A MEDICAL PROCEDURE
20170325897 · 2017-11-16
Inventors
- Robert E. Isaacs (Chapel Hill, NC)
- Samuel Morris Johnston (Durham, NC)
- David Alexander Skwerer (Raleigh, NC)
Cpc classification
A61B2090/365
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B34/20
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B6/5235
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B90/37
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2034/2072
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2090/3983
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B6/5205
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2090/3764
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2090/3966
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B6/463
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B6/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61B34/20
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B6/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B6/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A computer-assisted imaging and localization system assists the physician in positioning implants and instruments into a patient's body. The system displays overlapping images—one image of the surgical site with the patient's anatomy and another image showing the implant(s) or instrument(s). The overlapping image of the implant/instrument is moved over the static image of the anatomy as the implant/instrument is moved. These moving image of the implant/instrument can be an unaltered image or an image altered to intensify or mitigate the anatomical or non-anatomical aspects of the moving image. Sliding these images over one another helps the surgeon in positioning devices or instruments with a high degree of accuracy and with a limited number of additional x-rays.
Claims
1. A method for generating a display of an image of a patient's internal anatomy and of radio-dense effecter in a surgical field during a medical procedure, comprising: acquiring a baseline image of the surgical field including the patient's anatomy; acquiring an image of the radio-dense effecter in the surgical field; overlaying the image of the radio-dense effecter on the baseline image of the surgical field with the image of the radio-dense effecter positioned relative to the image of the patient's anatomy in the same manner as the actual radio-dense effecter is positioned relative to the actual anatomy; tracking the movement of the radio-dense effecter; and displaying the overlaid images with the image of the radio-dense effecter moving in accordance with the tracked movement of the radio-dense effecter.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the image of the radio-dense effecter is acquired from the baseline image.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein: the baseline image is acquired as a full dose x-ray image of the patient's anatomy; and the image of the radio-dense effecter is acquired from a less than full dose x-ray image of the patient's anatomy with the radio-dense effecter in an initial position relative to the anatomy.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising: acquiring a new image of the effecter in the surgical field after the effecter has been moved relative to the anatomy; subsequently overlaying the new image of the effecter relative to the baseline image as the radio-dense effecter is subsequently moved relative to the anatomy.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of acquiring an image of the radio-dense effecter in the surgical field includes altering the image.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the step of altering the image of the radio-dense effecter in the surgical field includes enhancing the specific image of the effecter itself.
7. The method of claim 5, wherein the step of altering the image of the radio-dense effecter in the surgical field includes reducing the intensity of the specific image of the anatomy relative to the intensity of the specific image of the radio-dense effecter.
8. The method of claim 5, wherein the step of altering the image of the radio-dense effecter includes replacing the image of the actual effecter in the surgical field with a mask of the radio-dense effecter.
9. The method of claim 5, wherein the step of altering the image of the radio-dense effecter includes generating an image of a slug indicative of the working tip of the radio-dense effecter.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the configuration of the image of the slug changes if the imaging device used to acquire the baseline image is moved.
11. The method of claim 9, wherein: the image of the slug includes a central element and a second element representing a point on the radio-dense effecter offset from the working tip along a longitudinal axis of the radio-dense effecter; and the orientation of the second element relative to the central element is based on the angular orientation of the radio-dense effecter relative to the surgical field.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the central element is a dot or a small circle and the second element is a larger concentric circle.
13. The method of claim 11, wherein the central element is a dot or a small circle and the second element is a non-circular element adapted to represent a rotation of the radio-dense effecter about its longitudinal axis.
14. A system for displaying of an image of a patient's internal anatomy and of radio-dense effecter in a surgical field during a medical procedure, comprising: a device for acquiring images of the surgical field; a tracking device for tracking the position of the radio-dense effecter within the surgical field; an image processor for receiving data from the device for acquiring images and from the tracking device, the image processor including a memory and a computer processor for processing the data and to generate data corresponding to a baseline image of the surgical field and an image of the radio-dense effecter in the surgical field, the processor operable to execute software to overlay the image of the radio-dense effecter on the baseline image of the surgical field with the image of the radio-dense effecter positioned relative to the image of the patient's anatomy in the same manner as the actual radio-dense effecter is positioned relative to the actual anatomy, the software further operable to move the image of the radio-dense effecter relative to the baseline image as the effecter is moved relative to the actual anatomy; and a display for receiving data from the image processor to display the overlaid images.
15. A tracking element for a surgical tool or instrument having an elongated shaft and a working tip, the tracking element comprising: a cylindrical body configured to clamp onto the elongated shaft of the tool or instrument; at least one concentric band at least partially encircling the outside surface of the cylindrical body, the at least one concentric band adapted to be detected by an optical localizer or an optical detection device associated with an x-ray imaging system.
16. The tracking element of claim 15, wherein the at least one concentric band is an optical tape applied to the outside surface of the body.
17. The tracking element of claim 15, further comprising at least two concentric bands on the outside surface of the cylindrical body, wherein the at least two concentric bands are positioned apart at a predetermined distance indicative of the type of tool or instrument.
18. The tracking element of claim 15 wherein the at least one concentric band has a band width that is indicative of the type of tool or instrument.
19. The tracking element of claim 15, further comprising an arm projecting outward from said cylindrical body and including a band on the outside surface of the arm adapted to be detected by an optical localizer or optical detection device.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0045] For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the disclosure, reference will now be made to the embodiments illustrated in the drawings and described in the following written specification. It is understood that no limitation to the scope of the disclosure is thereby intended. It is further understood that the present disclosure includes any alterations and modifications to the illustrated embodiments and includes further applications of the principles disclosed herein as would normally occur to one skilled in the art to which this disclosure pertains.
[0046] According to one aspect of the invention, the process begins with taking an image of the anatomy to be addressed surgically. Typically this “localizing shot” or “baseline image” does not contain the radio-dense effecter (e.g.—screw, cannula, guidewire, instrument, etc.) that is to be moved/adjusted, although in one embodiment a single image containing the effecter can be used. The image processing device 122 (
[0047] The movement of the “new” image on the display is based on the geometry of the tip of the effecter relative to the location within the cone beam of the fluoroscope, as depicted in
[0048] The “new” image, shown in the lower representation in
[0049] In the example shown in
[0050] A stationary full dose new image can be taken, such as the display in the screen shot of
[0051] It can be appreciated that as the physician moves the effecter 10 the low dose image moves with the effecter. When the effecter is within the field of the baseline or localizing shot image, as in
[0052] In recognition that a new image is not actually being acquired during each step of movement of the effecter, the physician can acquire new low dose images at various stages of movement of the effecter to verify the actual location of the effecter. Thus, any error in the actual vs. displayed position of the effecter relative to the anatomy is eliminated with each new low dose image taken. In other words, with each low dose image, the system recalibrates the actual position of the effecter relative to the anatomy based on the digital data acquired from the low dose image. The new data identifying the new position of the effecter is then the starting point for movement of the new image as the effecter is moved by the surgeon. It is contemplated that the physician may require multiple low dose images as the effecter is moved into its final position, with each low dose image recalibrating the actual position of the effecter, potentially culminating in a full dose image to verify the final position.
[0053] Although a low radiation image is shown in
[0054] The image of
[0055] The metal intensification image of
[0056] Similar to the images of
[0057] The present invention contemplates a system and method for moving image masks or overlapping image sets based on the movement of a tracked object, which provides the physician or surgeon with the ability to place a surgical effecter at the correct location inside a patient with a minimal number of X-ray images. Movement projection is not based on the absolute motion of the effecter but rather on the relative motion of the tracked effecter within the imaging space. Although knowledge of the absolute location of the tip of the effecter is needed for certain image movements, such as shown in
[0058] The position of the effecter/instrument can be recalibrated on each new X-ray shot. On the instrument side this means that each x-ray resets the relative position or the initial starting point of the “new” image to the current location of the tracked effecter to which is linked a “new” image with that effecter in it. This feature makes the system mostly focused on relative movement so that the potential time horizon for drift to set in is minimized.
[0059] The system and method disclosed herein creates “pseudo-live fluoroscopy”, meaning that the physician/surgeon can see the movement of the effecter/instrument in real-time without constant imaging of the patient. The present disclosure further contemplates automating taking images to create constantly re-updated spot images with “pseudo-live fluoroscopy” in between to create a continuous high accuracy instrument tracking device with a live fluoroscopy appearance with dramatically fewer images and resulting radiation. The methods of the present disclosure only require knowledge of relative movement (meaning the delta between the last position of the instrument to the current) and only require displaying the 2D motion of the effecter/“new” image to make this functional. The present disclosure provides a more comprehensive imaging system compared to typical IGS where it is necessary to know the absolute movement and the actual knowledge of what is being moved (in order to project a correct virtual representation of it).
[0060] The system and method of the present invention works with a metal mask or an actual image, and can work with low dose images or full dose images. With this system, the entire image can be moved or adjusted, as shown in
[0061] The system and method disclosed herein uses the actual effecter (or more specifically an active x-ray picture of the effecter), not a virtual representation of it as in a typical IGS. This approach makes it possible to emphasize or deemphasize different features (e.g.—anatomy, metal, etc) of the two images to aid in visualization. The methods disclosed herein do not require distortion correction or dewarping, or a calibration phantom, as is often required in typical IGS. Thus, the present system does not require a grid on the c-arm to correct for the various types of distortion (i.e.—pin cushion, etc.). When an IGS system is being used, the present system permits the IGS tracker to be either placed at the tip of the effecter (in the case of an EM microsensor or the like) or projected to the tip by a known offset that is more typical of an optical system. The present system does not require any patient reference, such as a “beacon” that is standard on nearly all IGS systems. In particular, it is not necessary to know the location of the object's tip relative to the c-arm (the distance of the tip between the image intensifier and the x-ray source) and the in plane movement (distance and trajectory) of the effecter
[0062] The present system and method can operate with a single image, separating metal or other radio-dense material from anatomy and leaving the anatomy without the metal or other radio-dense material as a layer, or the metal or other radio-dense material can be moved without anatomy as a layer, as depicted in
[0063] The present method and system even works with distorted IGS data (like is classically a problem with EM), as the movement won't be perfect but will asymptotically get closer to the correct position. For instance, if the IGS data is inaccurate by 20%, then after the first movement, a “new” x-ray will confirm that it is 20% off. However, the system is then recalibrated so that now moving the new “new” image is not only more accurate, but the distance needed to move is only 115.sup.th the prior distance. Thus, even if the system still has a 20% error, the next movement to close the gap of this 20% will be only 4% off (i.e., 20% of 20%). The use of relative motion and this perpetually smaller distance moved between each x-ray allows the present system to use noisy warped EM data for application in the OR.
[0064] In another feature, the tip of the effecter, such as effecter 10, can be represented on the displayed x-ray image as a slug 30 shown in the screen shot of
[0065] The color of the slug can be also varied to indicate certain conditions, namely conditions of the C-arm or x-ray device. For example, the slug can be green if the current position of the C-arm is within a narrow range of its position, 2 mm for instance, when the localizing image was acquired, and red if the current position is outside that range. When the slug changes from green to red the physician can obtain a new x-ray image to establish a new baseline and verify the actual current position of the effecter. As long as the color of the effecter remains green the physician can have confidence that the actual location of the effecter tip corresponds to the displayed location. As an alternative to changing color, the slug 30 can flash if the position of the C-arm has changed.
[0066] In the case where multiple effecters are present in a surgical site, the color of the slug 30 can be indicative of the particular effecter associated therewith. It should be appreciated that all of the steps discussed above can be implemented for multiple effectors for accurate navigation of the effecters to a desired position. It can be expected that the multiple effecters may require positioning and re-positioning during a procedure, so methods of the present disclosure can be modified accordingly to account for multiple effecters and multiple slugs.
[0067] In another embodiment, a slug 35, shown in
[0068] In an alternative embodiment, a slug 35′ can include the same first element in the form of a dot or small circle 36′ depicting the position of the effecter tip, as shown in
[0069] As discussed above, the present systems and methods utilize tracking information from a localizer system that acquires the position of the effecter. Typical localizer systems utilize an array of optical sensors to track an optical tracking component mounted to the end of the effecter. This arrangement is cumbersome and often interferes with the surgeon's field of view of the surgical site. In one aspect of the present disclosure, an effecter 40 includes a handle 41 with an elongated shaft 42 terminating in a working tip 43, as depicted in
[0070] In one aspect of this feature of the invention, the markers 44a, 44b are separated by a predetermined spacing in which the spacing is indicative of the type of effecter. For instance, one spacing of the markers may denote a cage inserter while another different spacing of the markers may denote a distracter. The localizer system can be configured to discern the spacing of the markers 44a, 44b and then refer to a stored data base to determine the nature of the effecter being detected. The data base includes information locating the working tip in relation to the markers so that the position of the working tip can be accurately determined by sensing the location of the markers. The data base may also include a model of the instrument that can be used to generate the metal mask 20 described above. Once the particular effecter is identified, the localizer system will always know where the working tip is located even when one of the two markers is obscured. Alternatively, the width of one or more of the bands may be indicative of the nature of the effecter being detected.
[0071] In another aspect, the markers are incorporated into a tracking element 45 that can be mounted to the shaft 42′ of a tool 40′ that is otherwise similar to the tool 40, as shown in
[0072] In an alternative embodiment, an effecter 40″ shown in
[0073] As mentioned, the location of the markers on the effecter can be used to identify the nature of the effecter—i.e., as a tool, instrument, implant etc. The imaging software remembers what effecters are in the surgical field as well as the positions as they are moved within that field. Even if one of more of the markers are temporarily blocked from view of the localizer or tracking device, the imaging software can extrapolate the position of the effecter based on the position of the available markers.
[0074] In a further aspect of the invention, the image processing software can be configured to automate certain features of the system based on the type of effecter detected and the nature of the procedure. The software can permit the surgeon to identify the nature of the surgical procedure, and then this information together with the information regarding the effecter or effecters in use can be used to toggle certain display features. The toggled features can include metal enhancement (as discussed herein), the nature of the slugs displayed on the x-ray image, or the use of one or two adjacent views (such as AP and lateral at the same time).
[0075] The system described above provides a method for tracking an effecter, such as a tool T within a displayed field F, as illustrated in
[0076] The software of the present disclosure thus provides a metal identification feature that is always running in the background of the imaging software execution. The software automatically identifies the presence of a radio-dense object in the surgical field without any operator intervention, and displays an image of the radio-dense object without operator intervention. The present disclosure thus contemplates a system for identifying a radio-dense object in an image field and enhancing the display of that object for the benefit of the surgeon attempting to navigate the object within the surgical field. The software disclosed herein thus identifies the nature and parameters of the radio-dense object without any input or intervention from the radiologist or surgeon. The software analyzes the x-ray image to locate the radio-dense object or objects and then create a mask corresponding to the configuration of the object. When the object is moved, the software can move only the object mask without modifying the underlying image of the surgical field. In one approach, the software utilizes existing tracking data for the guided surgical tool to identify the region of the image field in which the tip of the instrument or tool can be found, and/or a general angle of projection of the tool on the x-ray obtained from the existing tracking data. The present disclosure thus provides a system that can locate a tool T even where the tracking data only identifies a region R within the viewing field F (
[0077] Once the radio-dense object is located, the software and system of the present disclosure enhances or intensifies the image of the radio-dense object. As shown in
[0078] The system and software of the present disclosure allows isolation of a radio-dense object within an image, such as the image
[0079]
[0080] The system and software further provides two ways to view movement of a tracked radio-dense object within a surgical field. The system described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,526,700, incorporated by reference above, provides a system for orienting a view as the x-ray device or C-arm is angled, as depicted in
[0081] In accordance with the present disclosure, when the radio-dense effecter or tool is moved, as shown in
[0082] As an adjunct to this feature, the image data for the rotated image of
[0083] Alternatively, as shown in
[0084] The grid lines can help illustrate angular movements of the effecter projected into the particular imaging plane (e.g., AP or lateral). As an alternative or adjunct, the display of the image of the moving effecter can be manipulated according to the nature of the movement. When the effecter, or more specifically the tip of the effecter, is moved in an orthogonal direction (x, y, z) the image of the effecter moves linearly. When the effecter is rotated or pivoted relative to the anatomy, the image of the effecter can be skewed in relation to the angle of pivot. Thus, as the effecter pivots in one plane, an image of the effecter in a perpendicular plane skews as the effecter pivots, and more particularly the diameter in the direction of pivoting can shrink and expand as the effecter pivots.
[0085] As described above, the imaging software of the present system implements a method to detect the presence and location of tracked radio-dense objects and enhances the objects. The position and orientation of the radio-dense effecter, such as a tool or instrument, in space with respect to an X-ray device are measured by a tracker or localizer system associated with the effecter. This tracking information is used to translate an X-ray image of the effecter on the viewing screen that predicts where the effecter would appear if another X-ray image were acquired. The image of the tool can be merged with a previously acquired image of the patient's anatomy, with the previously acquired image remaining static. The resulting merged image informs the physician about the placement of the effecter relative to the anatomy.
[0086] One problem with this approach is that certain commonly used surgical tools T can be difficult to see in an X-ray image, especially if this image was acquired at a low X-ray dosage, as depicted in the screen shot images of
[0087] The steps of one method implemented by the imaging software are shown in the chart of
[0088] One step of the method is to detect rectangles within the x-ray image. Each pixel is assigned a score that represents how well a dark rectangular pattern can be fitted to the neighborhood centered on the pixel. A rectangle is defined by its angle, width, and length. The score for a particular rectangle is the sum of the differences in the intensity values between points along the inside of the long edges of the rectangle and points along the outside (
[0089] When tracking a radio-dense tool that is especially thick, the difference calculation can also be performed at multiple depths in the interior of the rectangle. This ensures that the rectangle has a homogeneous interior. The intensity difference formula can be clamped to a narrow range of possible values, and scaled by a fractional exponent, so that especially large intensity differences will not have a disproportionate influence on the final score.
[0090] In a next step, pixels of the x-ray image are assigned to the rectangles. This step extends the results from rectangle detection. For each pixel, the neighborhood around the pixel is searched for the highest-scoring rectangle that overlaps it (
[0091] In an X-ray image, a surgical tool may comprise multiple connected rectangles, so it is preferable to join the multiple rectangles together into a single contiguous region. In order to determine whether or not pixels belong to the same region, for two adjacent pixels, each of which has been assigned a rectangle score, angle, width, and length from the previous steps, the connection criterion is the sum of the differences in the rectangle scores, angles, widths, and lengths (
[0092] In the next step the tracking information obtained from the localizer or tracking device for the tool is related to the pixels. The tracking device provides data for the position and orientation of the tip of the surgical tool in space. This tip can be virtually projected onto the surface of the X-ray camera and related to a point and an angle within the X-ray image, as described above. For enhancement purposes, the primary interest is in rectangular image features that have a position and angle that are close to the projected tool tip. For each pixel, the distance to the projected tool tip is calculated, and the difference between the angle of the tool tip and the angle of the rectangle at the pixel is calculated. These values can be clamped and scaled with an exponent to yield weights that quantify the spatial proximity and angular proximity of the pixel to the tool tip (
[0093] The pixels are then grouped into contiguous regions. Each region will have a unique index, a rectangle score, a spatial proximity, and an angle proximity. These values will be accessible at each pixel in the region. There are various algorithms available for this task. The algorithm used here was chosen because it can be performed at each pixel in parallel. The region growing algorithm proceeds iteratively. At each iteration, for each of 8 possible directions, each pixel looks at its neighbor in that direction. If the pixel shares a connection with its neighbor, then they compare rectangle scores. If the neighbor has a higher score, then the pixel receives the score and the index of its neighbor. Otherwise, if the scores are equal, and the neighbor has a higher index, then the pixel receives the index of its neighbor. If the pixel shares a connection with its neighbor and the neighbor has a higher spatial proximity, then the pixel receives the spatial proximity of its neighbor. If the pixel shares a connection with its neighbor and the neighbor has a higher angular proximity, then the pixel receives the angular proximity of its neighbor. At the end of the iteration, if the index, score, spatial proximity or angular proximity have changed for any pixel in the image, then another iteration is performed. Otherwise, the algorithm halts.
[0094] When the algorithm has finished, each pixel has been assigned to a region. Each region has a unique index, and each region has the best rectangle score, spatial proximity, and angular proximity out of all the pixels in the region. These values are stored at each pixel in the region.
[0095] Next, the regions are visually enhanced. In an X-ray image, a surgical tool should appear darker than the surrounding area. To enhance visibility, the pixels inside the region can be made darker, and the pixels outside the region lighter (
[0096] The latitudinal and longitudinal axes of the neighboring rectangle are determined. The distance between the pixel and its neighbor is expressed as a sum of a latitudinal component and a longitudinal component. The latitudinal component is passed to a difference-of-Gaussians model that returns a negative value for pixels within the interior of the rectangle and a positive value in the exterior. The longitudinal component is passed to a hyperbolic model that returns a fraction that approaches 0 as the longitudinal distance grows. The offset to the pixel contributed by this neighbor is a product of the rectangle score, region score, spatial proximity, angular proximity, latitudinal weight, and longitudinal weight. The offsets from all neighboring pixels are added together. This step yields an intensity offset that can be used in the image merging step.
[0097] The tracking information is then used to isolate the region of interest. The tracking information is used to weight the regions according to their proximity to the tool tip. This will generate a mask that can be used to selectively weight different parts of the image when the image is merged (
[0098] Finally, the enhanced tool image is added to the anatomical image. At pixels where the mask value is high, the enhanced tool image predominates, while at pixels where the mask value is low, the anatomical image predominates. The maximum and minimum ratios of the two images are chosen so that neither image is ever completely suppressed. This final merged image is displayed to the user as depicted in the screen shot of
[0099] The present disclosure should be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character. It is understood that only certain embodiments have been presented and that all changes, modifications and further applications that come within the spirit of the disclosure are desired to be protected.