Abstract

Background and ObjectivePhysiological motions have a significant impact on soft tissue deformation and accuracy of surgical procedures, which is essential for realistic surgical simulation. While existing studies offer accurate simulation of soft tissue deformation, integrating physiological motions into deformation models of soft tissue remains a challenging task. MethodsThis paper introduces a novel deformation model, based on complementary dynamics, to animate soft tissue deformation under physiological motion. The finite element method is incorporated to accurately characterize the elastic behavior of the soft tissue. Mathematical models of physiological motion are utilized and the physiological effects are converted into displacements of a predefined set of handles within the soft tissue mesh. Complementary displacements derived from the inherent dynamics of the soft tissue are calculated, enabling the simulation of physiological motions and elastic behaviors in soft tissue deformation. ResultsExperiments were conducted to evaluate the performance and effectiveness of the proposed method in simulating soft tissue deformation under physiological motion. The simulation results show that the soft tissues exhibit physiological motion that corresponds to the rhythm of arterial pressure fluctuations, heartbeat or respiratory. Furthermore, the presented method exhibits stable performance compared with existing force-based methods. ConclusionsBoth elastic behaviors and physiological motions of soft tissue deformation can be governed by the proposed method. A high degree of realistic visualization is achieved for virtual surgery simulation.

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