Abstract

Abstract Fractures of the scaphoid bone may be treated in a minimally-invasive fashion. Conventionally, fluoroscopy is required to guide the placement of an osteosynthesis screw. In this work, an alternative method based on volumetric ultrasound is validated. Methods: The fully automatic and fast image processing pipeline involves two machine learning architectures for segmentation and registration. A pre-operatively acquired 3D bone model is registered to the 3D bone surface segmented from the intra-operative ultrasound. Screw positioning is planned in an automated fashion and evaluated in an in-vitro setting: Volumetric ultrasound images of a 3D-printed phantom of a human wrist are acquired for 22 different probe poses. For 220 test runs with different initial displacements, the resulting screw placement within a defined safe zone is evaluated. If the screw lies within the safe zone, its placement is assumed to be successful. Results: An isolated analysis of the registration results in a surface distance error of the registered meshes of 0.49 ± 0.01mm, with successful screw placement in all of the evaluated 220 test runs. The full pipeline, combining segmentation and registration, achieves a mean surface distance error of 0.79 ± 0.37mm, leading to successful screw placements for 149 out of 220 test runs. Poses not suited for the registration could be determined. Excluding these from the analysis, 139 out of 160 test runs are successful. Conclusion: The method proves to be promising when evaluating the registration alone, even given the challenging setup of sub-optimal probe positions. The experiments also demonstrate that further improvement regarding the segmentation is necessary.

Highlights

  • Fractures of the scaphoid make up for 70% of all carpal bone fractures [1]

  • Poses not suited for the registration could be determined

  • The experiments demonstrate that further improvement regarding the segmentation is necessary

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Summary

Introduction

Fractures of the scaphoid make up for 70% of all carpal bone fractures [1]. Patients may be treated conservatively with a cast. In severe cases with dislocation or loss of blood supply, operative treatment is indicated. Surgery can be executed in an open or minimally-invasive setting, with the latter decreasing blood loss. The bone fragments are united using an osteosynthesis screw, which is placed under continuous fluoroscopy. This exposes the patient and especially the surgeon to substantial radiation [2]

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