ESWT - tracking organs during focused ultrasound surgery

We report here our results in a multi-sensor setup reproducing the conditions of an automated focused ultrasound surgery environment. The aim is to continuously predict the position of an internal organ (here the liver) under guided and non-guided free breathing, with the accuracy required by surger...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2012 IEEE International Workshop on Machine Learning for Signal Processing pp. 1 - 6
Main Authors Grozea, C., Lubke, D., Dingeldey, F., Schiewe, M., Gerhardt, J., Schumann, C., Hirsch, J.
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.09.2012
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ISBN1467310247
9781467310246
ISSN1551-2541
DOI10.1109/MLSP.2012.6349746

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Summary:We report here our results in a multi-sensor setup reproducing the conditions of an automated focused ultrasound surgery environment. The aim is to continuously predict the position of an internal organ (here the liver) under guided and non-guided free breathing, with the accuracy required by surgery. We have performed experiments with 16 healthy human subjects, two of those taking part in full-scale experiments involving a 3 Tesla MRI machine recording a volume containing the liver. For the other 14 subjects we have used the optical tracker as a surrogate target. All subjects where volunteers who agreed to participate in the experiments after being thoroughly informed about it. For the MRI sessions we have analyzed semi-automatically offline the images in order to obtain the ground truth, the true position of the selected feature of the liver. The results we have obtained with continuously updated random forest models are very promising, we have obtained good prediction-target correlation coefficients for the surrogate targets (0.71 ± 0.1) and excellent for the real targets in the MRI experiments (over 0.91), despite being limited to a lower model update frequency, once every 6.16 seconds.
ISBN:1467310247
9781467310246
ISSN:1551-2541
DOI:10.1109/MLSP.2012.6349746