Guéziec A, Kazanzides P, Williamson B, Taylor R H
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, Hawthorne, NY 10532, USA.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging. 1998 Oct;17(5):715-28. doi: 10.1109/42.736023.
We describe new methods for rigid registration of a preoperative computed tomography (CT)-scan image to a set of intraoperative X-ray fluoroscopic images, for guiding a surgical robot to its trajectory planned from CT. Our goal is to perform the registration, i.e., compute a rotation and translation of one data set with respect to the other to within a prescribed accuracy, based upon bony anatomy only, without external fiducial markers. With respect to previous approaches, the following aspects are new: 1) we correct the geometric distortion in fluoroscopic images and calibrate them directly with respect to the robot by affixing to it a new calibration device designed as a radiolucent rod with embedded metallic markers, and by moving the device along two planes, while radiographs are being acquired at regular intervals; 2) the registration uses an algorithm for computing the best transformation between a set of lines in three space, the (intraoperative) X-ray paths, and a set of points on the surface of the bone (imaged preoperatively), in a statistically robust fashion, using the Cayley parameterization of a rotation; and 3) to find corresponding sets of points to the X-ray paths on the surfaces, our new approach consists of extracting the surface apparent contours for a given viewpoint, as a set of closed three-dimensional nonplanar curves, before registering the apparent contours to X-ray paths. Aside from algorithms, there are a number of major technical difficulties associated with engineering a clinically viable system using anatomy and image-based registration. To detect and solve them, we have so far conducted two experiments with the surgical robot in an operating room (OR), using CT and fluoroscopic image data of a cadaver bone, and attempting to faithfully simulate clinical conditions. Such experiments indicate that intraoperative X-ray-based registration is a promising alternative to marker-based registration for clinical use with our proposed method.
我们描述了将术前计算机断层扫描(CT)图像与一组术中X射线荧光透视图像进行刚性配准的新方法,用于引导手术机器人沿着从CT规划的轨迹移动。我们的目标是仅基于骨骼解剖结构,在没有外部基准标记的情况下,进行配准,即在规定的精度范围内计算一个数据集相对于另一个数据集的旋转和平移。相对于以前的方法,以下几个方面是新的:1)我们校正荧光透视图像中的几何失真,并通过将一个设计为带有嵌入式金属标记的射线可透过杆的新校准设备固定到机器人上,并在获取射线照片时以规则间隔沿着两个平面移动该设备,直接相对于机器人对其进行校准;2)配准使用一种算法,以统计稳健的方式,利用旋转的凯莱参数化,计算三维空间中的一组线(术中X射线路径)与骨骼表面上的一组点(术前成像)之间的最佳变换;3)为了找到表面上与X射线路径相对应的点集,我们的新方法包括在将表面表观轮廓与X射线路径配准之前,从给定视角提取表面表观轮廓,作为一组封闭的三维非平面曲线。除了算法之外,使用解剖结构和基于图像的配准来设计一个临床可行的系统还存在许多重大技术难题。为了检测和解决这些难题,我们迄今为止在手术室(OR)中使用手术机器人进行了两次实验,使用了一具尸体骨骼的CT和荧光透视图像数据,并试图忠实地模拟临床情况。这些实验表明,对于我们提出的方法,术中基于X射线的配准是临床上替代基于标记的配准的一种有前景的方法。