Abstract

Autologous ear reconstruction is a surgical procedure performed in the case of defects of the outer ear in which the malformed anatomy is reconstructed with autologous cartilage tissue and often involves the use of surgical guides modelled from a digital reconstruction of the ear anatomy. To obtain such three-dimensional anatomy, traditional imaging methods, which are expensive and invasive, can be replaced by professional 3D scanners or low-cost commercial devices. In this context, this paper focuses on the evaluation of two devices for the acquisition of the outer ear, the Intel® RealSense D405™ (stereo camera) and the TrueDepth camera of the iPhone® 13 (structured light camera), proposing a comparison based on four parameters: accuracy, precision, deviation range and point-to-point distance, in order to assess their usability in the medical field, and in particular in the context of autologous ear reconstruction. The results show that, despite significantly different handling of the raw data, the performance of the two devices is comparable: average accuracy is 0.76 mm for the D405 and 0.95 mm for the iPhone 13, average precision is 0.071 mm for the D405 and 0.065 mm for the iPhone 13, average range of deviation is 3.12 mm for the D405 and 3.64 mm for the iPhone 13.

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