Moving object tracking in clinical scenarios: application to cardiac surgery and cerebral aneurysm clipping. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Surgical procedures such as laparoscopic and robotic surgeries are popular since they are invasive in nature and use miniaturized surgical instruments for small incisions. Tracking of the instruments (graspers, needle drivers) and field of view from the stereoscopic camera during surgery could further help the surgeons to remain focussed and reduce the probability of committing any mistakes. Tracking is usually preferred in computerized video surveillance, traffic monitoring, military surveillance system, and vehicle navigation. Despite the numerous efforts over the last few years, object tracking still remains an open research problem, mainly due to motion blur, image noise, lack of image texture, and occlusion. Most of the existing object tracking methods are time-consuming and less accurate when the input video contains high volume of information and more number of instruments. METHODS: This paper presents a variational framework to track the motion of moving objects in surgery videos. The key contributions are as follows: (1) A denoising method using stochastic resonance in maximal overlap discrete wavelet transform is proposed and (2) a robust energy functional based on Bhattacharyya coefficient to match the target region in the first frame of the input sequence with the subsequent frames using a similarity metric is developed. A modified affine transformation-based registration is used to estimate the motion of the features following an active contour-based segmentation method to converge the contour resulted from the registration process. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: The proposed method has been implemented on publicly available databases; the results are found satisfactory. Overlap index (OI) is used to evaluate the tracking performance, and the maximum OI is found to be 76% and 88% on private data and public data sequences.

publication date

  • July 15, 2019

Research

keywords

  • Cardiac Surgical Procedures
  • Intracranial Aneurysm
  • Surgery, Computer-Assisted

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC6858403

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85068973509

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1109/TBME.2019.2896972

PubMed ID

  • 31309385

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 14

issue

  • 12