Abstract

PurposeRobot-assisted surgery at the temporal bone utilizing a flexible drilling unit would allow safer access to clinical targets such as the cochlea or the internal auditory canal by navigating along nonlinear trajectories. One key sub-step for clinical realization of such a procedure is automated preoperative surgical planning that incorporates both segmentation of risk structures and optimized trajectory planning.MethodsWe automatically segment risk structures using 3D U-Nets with probabilistic active shape models. For nonlinear trajectory planning, we adapt bidirectional rapidly exploring random trees on Bézier Splines followed by sequential convex optimization. Functional evaluation, assessing segmentation quality based on the subsequent trajectory planning step, shows the suitability of our novel segmentation approach for this two-step preoperative pipeline.ResultsBased on 24 data sets of the temporal bone, we perform a functional evaluation of preoperative surgical planning. Our experiments show that the automated segmentation provides safe and coherent surface models that can be used in collision detection during motion planning. The source code of the algorithms will be made publicly available.ConclusionOptimized trajectory planning based on shape regularized segmentation leads to safe access canals for temporal bone surgery. Functional evaluation shows the promising results for both 3D U-Net and Bézier Spline trajectories.

Highlights

  • Novel robot-assisted interventions have the potential to minimize patient trauma, reduce risk of infection or enable new surgical applications [2]

  • We present a complete preoperative planning pipeline combining segmentation and nonlinear trajectory planning to a safe workflow

  • We propose a novel shape regularized 3D U-Nets approach for proper extraction of the tiny risk structures within the temporal bone

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Summary

Introduction

Novel robot-assisted interventions have the potential to minimize patient trauma, reduce risk of infection or enable new surgical applications [2]. At the temporal bone, existing solutions focus on the drilling of linear access canals [4]. This paper addresses a novel nonlinear approach with the poten-. “This paper is based on the work: ”Fauser J., Stenin I., Kristin J., Klenzner T., Schipper J., Mukhopadhyay A. (2019) Optimizing Clearance of Bézier Spline Trajectories for Minimally-Invasive Surgery. In: Shen D. et al (eds) Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention – MICCAI 2019. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 11768.

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