ABSTRACT
Electromagnetic-based navigation bronchoscopy requires accurate and robust estimation of the bronchoscope position inside the bronchial tree. However, respiratory motion, coughing, patient movement, and airway deformation inflicted by bronchoscope significantly hinder the accuracy of intraoperative bronchoscopic localization. In this study, a real-time and automatic registration procedure was proposed to superimpose the current location of the bronchoscope to corresponding locations on a centerline extracted from bronchial computed tomography (CT) images. A centerline-guided Gaussian mixture model (CG-GMM) was introduced to register a bronchoscope's position concerning extracted centerlines. A GMM was fitted to bronchoscope positions where the orientation likelihood was chosen to assign the membership probabilities of the mixture model, which led to preserving the global and local structures. The problem was formulated and solved under the expectation maximization framework, where the feature correspondence and spatial transformation are estimated iteratively. Validation was performed on a dynamic phantom with four different respiratory motions and four human real bronchoscopy (RB) datasets. Results of the experiments conducted on the bronchial phantom showed that the average positional tracking error using the proposed approach was equal to 1.98 [Formula: see text] 0.98 mm that was reduced in comparison with independent electromagnetic tracking (EMT), iterative closest point (ICP), and coherent point drift (CPD) methods by 64%, 58%, and 53%, respectively. In the patient assessment part of the study, the average positional tracking error was 4.73 [Formula: see text] 4.76 mm and compared to ICP, and CPD methods showed 31.4% improvement of successfully tracked frames. Our approach introduces a novel method for real-time respiratory motion compensation that provides reliable guidance during bronchoscopic interventions and, thus could increase the diagnostic yield of transbronchial biopsy.
Subject(s)
Bronchoscopes , Movement , Algorithms , Bronchi/diagnostic imaging , Electromagnetic Phenomena , Humans , Normal Distribution , Phantoms, Imaging , Tomography, X-Ray ComputedABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Electromagnetic (EM)-based navigation methods without line-of-sight restrictions may improve lymph node sampling precision in transbronchial needle aspiration (TBNA) procedure. However, EM tracking susceptibility to metallic objects severely declines its precision. METHOD: We proposed to track the location of a tool in a dynamic bronchial phantom and compensate field distortion in a real-time procedure. Extended Kalman filter simultaneous localization and mapping (EKF-SLAM) algorithm employ the bronchial motion and observations of a redundant sensor. The proposed approach was applied to the phantom with four different amplitudes of breathing motion in the presence of two types of field-distorting objects. RESULTS: The proposed approach improved the accuracy of EM tracking on average from 18.94 ±1.17 mm to 4.59 ±0.29 mm and from 14.2 ±0.69 mm to 4.31 ±0.18mm in the presence of steel and aluminum, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: With EM tracking position error reduction based on the EKF-SLAM technique, the approach is appeared promising for a navigated ultrasound TBNA procedure.