Patient-specific model of a scoliotic torso for surgical planning


Autoria(s): Harmouche, Rola; Cheriet, Farida; Labelle, Hubert; Dansereau, Jean
Data(s)

27/10/2015

31/12/1969

27/10/2015

01/03/2013

Resumo

A method for the construction of a patient-specific model of a scoliotic torso for surgical planning via inter- patient registration is presented. Magnetic Resonance Images (MRI) of a generic model are registered to surface topography (TP) and X-ray data of a test patient. A partial model is first obtained via thin-plate spline registration between TP and X-ray data of the test patient. The MRIs from the generic model are then fit into the test patient using articulated model registration between the vertebrae of the generic model’s MRIs in prone position and the test patient’s X-rays in standing position. A non-rigid deformation of the soft tissues is performed using a modified thin-plate spline constrained to maintain bone rigidity and to fit in the space between the vertebrae and the surface of the torso. Results show average Dice values of 0.975 ± 0.012 between the MRIs following inter-patient registration and the surface topography of the test patient, which is comparable to the average value of 0.976 ± 0.009 previously obtained following intra-patient registration. The results also show a significant improvement compared to rigid inter-patient registration. Future work includes validating the method on a larger cohort of patients and incorporating soft tissue stiffness constraints. The method developed can be used to obtain a geometric model of a patient including bone structures, soft tissues and the surface of the torso which can be incorporated in a surgical simulator in order to better predict the outcome of scoliosis surgery, even if MRI data cannot be acquired for the patient.

Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR)

Identificador

Harmouche, R., Cheriet, F., Labelle, H., & Dansereau, J. (2013). Patient-specific model of a scoliotic torso for surgical planning. Proc. SPIE, 8671, 867120-867120-867127.

0277-786X

1996-756X

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/12511

10.1117/12.2007753

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

Proceedings of SPIE;8671

Palavras-Chave #Multimodal image registration #Inter-patient registration #Model to patient registration #Scoliosis #Scoliose
Tipo

Pré-publication / Preprint