Recent research studies reported that the employment of wearable augmented reality (AR) systems such as head-mounted displays for the in situ visualisation of ultrasound (US) images can improve the outcomes of US-guided biopsies through reduced procedure completion times and improved accuracy. Here, the authors continue in the direction of recent developments and present the first AR system for guiding an in-depth tumour enucleation procedure under US guidance. The system features an innovative visualisation modality with cutting trajectories that ‘sink’ into the tissue according to the depth reached by the electric scalpel, tracked in real-time, and a virtual-to-virtual alignment between the scalpel's tip and the trajectory. The system has high accuracy in estimating the scalpel's tip position (mean depth error of 0.4 mm and mean radial error of 1.34 mm). Furthermore, we demonstrated with a preliminary user study that our system allowed us to successfully guide an in-depth tumour enucleation procedure (i.e. preserving the safety margin around the lesion).

Visualization modality for augmented reality guidance of in-depth tumour enucleation procedures

Cattari Nadia;Cutolo Fabrizio;Placa Luciana;Ferrari Vincenzo
2024-01-01

Abstract

Recent research studies reported that the employment of wearable augmented reality (AR) systems such as head-mounted displays for the in situ visualisation of ultrasound (US) images can improve the outcomes of US-guided biopsies through reduced procedure completion times and improved accuracy. Here, the authors continue in the direction of recent developments and present the first AR system for guiding an in-depth tumour enucleation procedure under US guidance. The system features an innovative visualisation modality with cutting trajectories that ‘sink’ into the tissue according to the depth reached by the electric scalpel, tracked in real-time, and a virtual-to-virtual alignment between the scalpel's tip and the trajectory. The system has high accuracy in estimating the scalpel's tip position (mean depth error of 0.4 mm and mean radial error of 1.34 mm). Furthermore, we demonstrated with a preliminary user study that our system allowed us to successfully guide an in-depth tumour enucleation procedure (i.e. preserving the safety margin around the lesion).
2024
Cattari, Nadia; Cutolo, Fabrizio; LA PLACA, Luciana; Ferrari, Vincenzo
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/1272028
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