Abstract

Currently, intraoperative guidance tools used for brain tumor resection assistance during surgery have several limitations. Hyperspectral (HS) imaging is arising as a novel imaging technique that could offer new capabilities to delineate brain tumor tissue in surgical-time. However, the HS acquisition systems have some limitations regarding spatial and spectral resolution depending on the spectral range to be captured. Image fusion techniques combine information from different sensors to obtain an HS cube with improved spatial and spectral resolution. This paper describes the contributions to HS image fusion using two push-broom HS cameras, covering the visual and near-infrared (VNIR) [400–1000 nm] and near-infrared (NIR) [900–1700 nm] spectral ranges, which are integrated into an intraoperative HS acquisition system developed to delineate brain tumor tissue during neurosurgical procedures. Both HS images were registered using intensity-based and feature-based techniques with different geometric transformations to perform the HS image fusion, obtaining an HS cube with wide spectral range [435–1638 nm]. Four HS datasets were captured to verify the image registration and the fusion process. Moreover, segmentation and classification methods were evaluated to compare the performance results between the use of the VNIR and NIR data, independently, with respect to the fused data. The results reveal that the proposed methodology for fusing VNIR–NIR data improves the classification results up to 21% of accuracy with respect to the use of each data modality independently, depending on the targeted classification problem.

Highlights

  • Intraoperative guidance tools used for brain tumor resection assistance during surgery have several limitations

  • The changes in tumor volume that occurs during craniotomy and the brain shift are not covered in Image Guided Stereotactic (IGS) ­navigation8. 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) is only able to identify high-grade gliomas administering orally a contrast agent to the patient, being an invasive methodology that can cause side effects in the ­patient[9,10]

  • The IGS neuronavigation provide an accurate identification of tumor boundaries in low-grade gliomas, but not in high-grade ones, being affected by the brain shift phenomenon

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Summary

Introduction

Intraoperative guidance tools used for brain tumor resection assistance during surgery have several limitations. This paper describes the contributions to HS image fusion using two push-broom HS cameras, covering the visual and near-infrared (VNIR) [400–1000 nm] and near-infrared (NIR) [900–1700 nm] spectral ranges, which are integrated into an intraoperative HS acquisition system developed to delineate brain tumor tissue during neurosurgical procedures. Both HS images were registered using intensity-based and feature-based techniques with different geometric transformations to perform the HS image fusion, obtaining an HS cube with wide spectral range [435–1638 nm]. To obtain a broadband spectral range image, more than one HS camera is required, involving image registration and fusion algorithms to generate a combined HS image

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