Abstract

PurposeInteractive image-guided surgery technologies enable accurate target localization while preserving critical nearby structures in many surgical interventions. Current state-of-the-art interfaces largely employ traditional anatomical cross-sectional views or augmented reality environments to present the actual spatial location of the surgical instrument in preoperatively acquired images. This work proposes an alternative, simple, minimalistic visual interface intended to assist during real-time surgical target localization.MethodsThe estimated 3D pose of the interventional instruments and their positional uncertainty are intuitively presented in a visual interface with respect to the target point. A usability study with multidisciplinary participants evaluates the proposed interface projected in surgical microscope oculars against cross-sectional views. The latter was presented on a screen both stand-alone and combined with the proposed interface. The instruments were electromagnetically navigated in phantoms.ResultsThe usability study demonstrated that the participants were able to detect invisible targets marked in phantom imagery with significant enhancements for localization accuracy and duration time. Clinically experienced users reached the targets with shorter trajectories. The stand-alone and multi-modal versions of the proposed interface outperformed cross-sectional views-only navigation in both quantitative and qualitative evaluations.ConclusionThe results and participants’ feedback indicate potential to accurately navigate users toward the target with less distraction and workload. An ongoing study evaluates the proposed system in a preclinical setting for auditory brainstem implantation.

Highlights

  • Within the last decades, surgeons have been aided with image-guided, computer-assisted surgery (IGS) for accurate intraoperative navigation and localization of important critical structures in many interventions

  • For the purposes of tracking surgical instruments and performing image registration as well as presenting crosssectional views navigation employed in the usability study, an IGS system was utilized

  • The statistical difference was not found between visual guidance (VG) and IGS+VG (t test, significance level 0.05)

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Summary

Results

The usability study demonstrated that the participants were able to detect invisible targets marked in phantom imagery with significant enhancements for localization accuracy and duration time. The stand-alone and multi-modal versions of the proposed interface outperformed cross-sectional views-only navigation in both quantitative and qualitative evaluations

Conclusion
Introduction
Methods
Discussion
IEC 62366-1:2015 - Medical devices – Part 1
17. MED-EL Surgical guideline
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