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1.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 11(19): e2400980, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38482737

ABSTRACT

Endoscopes navigate within the human body to observe anatomical structures with minimal invasiveness. A major shortcoming of their use is their narrow field-of-view during navigation in large, hollow anatomical regions. Mosaics of endoscopic images can provide surgeons with a map of the tool's environment. This would facilitate procedures, improve their efficiency, and potentially generate better patient outcomes. The emergence of magnetically steered endoscopes opens the way to safer procedures and creates an opportunity to provide robotic assistance both in the generation of the mosaic map and in navigation within this map. This paper proposes methods to autonomously navigate magnetic endoscopes to 1) generate endoscopic image mosaics and 2) use these mosaics as user interfaces to navigate throughout the explored area. These are the first strategies, which allow autonomous magnetic navigation in large, hollow organs during minimally invasive surgeries. The feasibility of these methods is demonstrated experimentally both in vitro and ex vivo in the context of the treatment of twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome. This minimally invasive procedure is performed in utero and necessitates coagulating shared vessels of twin fetuses on the placenta. A mosaic of the vasculature in combination with autonomous navigation has the potential to significantly facilitate this challenging surgery.


Subject(s)
Endoscopy , Humans , Endoscopy/methods , Female , Fetofetal Transfusion/surgery , Magnetics/methods , Endoscopes , Pregnancy , Robotic Surgical Procedures/methods
2.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg ; 19(3): 481-492, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38066354

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: In twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS), abnormal vascular anastomoses in the monochorionic placenta can produce uneven blood flow between the two fetuses. In the current practice, TTTS is treated surgically by closing abnormal anastomoses using laser ablation. This surgery is minimally invasive and relies on fetoscopy. Limited field of view makes anastomosis identification a challenging task for the surgeon. METHODS: To tackle this challenge, we propose a learning-based framework for in vivo fetoscopy frame registration for field-of-view expansion. The novelties of this framework rely on a learning-based keypoint proposal network and an encoding strategy to filter (i) irrelevant keypoints based on fetoscopic semantic image segmentation and (ii) inconsistent homographies. RESULTS: We validate our framework on a dataset of six intraoperative sequences from six TTTS surgeries from six different women against the most recent state-of-the-art algorithm, which relies on the segmentation of placenta vessels. CONCLUSION: The proposed framework achieves higher performance compared to the state of the art, paving the way for robust mosaicking to provide surgeons with context awareness during TTTS surgery.


Subject(s)
Fetofetal Transfusion , Laser Therapy , Pregnancy , Female , Humans , Fetoscopy/methods , Fetofetal Transfusion/diagnostic imaging , Fetofetal Transfusion/surgery , Placenta/surgery , Placenta/blood supply , Laser Therapy/methods , Algorithms
3.
Med Image Anal ; 92: 103066, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38141453

ABSTRACT

Fetoscopy laser photocoagulation is a widely adopted procedure for treating Twin-to-Twin Transfusion Syndrome (TTTS). The procedure involves photocoagulation pathological anastomoses to restore a physiological blood exchange among twins. The procedure is particularly challenging, from the surgeon's side, due to the limited field of view, poor manoeuvrability of the fetoscope, poor visibility due to amniotic fluid turbidity, and variability in illumination. These challenges may lead to increased surgery time and incomplete ablation of pathological anastomoses, resulting in persistent TTTS. Computer-assisted intervention (CAI) can provide TTTS surgeons with decision support and context awareness by identifying key structures in the scene and expanding the fetoscopic field of view through video mosaicking. Research in this domain has been hampered by the lack of high-quality data to design, develop and test CAI algorithms. Through the Fetoscopic Placental Vessel Segmentation and Registration (FetReg2021) challenge, which was organized as part of the MICCAI2021 Endoscopic Vision (EndoVis) challenge, we released the first large-scale multi-center TTTS dataset for the development of generalized and robust semantic segmentation and video mosaicking algorithms with a focus on creating drift-free mosaics from long duration fetoscopy videos. For this challenge, we released a dataset of 2060 images, pixel-annotated for vessels, tool, fetus and background classes, from 18 in-vivo TTTS fetoscopy procedures and 18 short video clips of an average length of 411 frames for developing placental scene segmentation and frame registration for mosaicking techniques. Seven teams participated in this challenge and their model performance was assessed on an unseen test dataset of 658 pixel-annotated images from 6 fetoscopic procedures and 6 short clips. For the segmentation task, overall baseline performed was the top performing (aggregated mIoU of 0.6763) and was the best on the vessel class (mIoU of 0.5817) while team RREB was the best on the tool (mIoU of 0.6335) and fetus (mIoU of 0.5178) classes. For the registration task, overall the baseline performed better than team SANO with an overall mean 5-frame SSIM of 0.9348. Qualitatively, it was observed that team SANO performed better in planar scenarios, while baseline was better in non-planner scenarios. The detailed analysis showed that no single team outperformed on all 6 test fetoscopic videos. The challenge provided an opportunity to create generalized solutions for fetoscopic scene understanding and mosaicking. In this paper, we present the findings of the FetReg2021 challenge, alongside reporting a detailed literature review for CAI in TTTS fetoscopy. Through this challenge, its analysis and the release of multi-center fetoscopic data, we provide a benchmark for future research in this field.


Subject(s)
Fetofetal Transfusion , Placenta , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Algorithms , Fetofetal Transfusion/diagnostic imaging , Fetofetal Transfusion/surgery , Fetofetal Transfusion/pathology , Fetoscopy/methods , Fetus , Placenta/diagnostic imaging
4.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg ; 18(12): 2349-2356, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37587389

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Fetoscopic laser photocoagulation of placental anastomoses is the most effective treatment for twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS). A robust mosaic of placenta and its vascular network could support surgeons' exploration of the placenta by enlarging the fetoscope field-of-view. In this work, we propose a learning-based framework for field-of-view expansion from intra-operative video frames. METHODS: While current state of the art for fetoscopic mosaicking builds upon the registration of anatomical landmarks which may not always be visible, our framework relies on learning-based features and keypoints, as well as robust transformer-based image-feature matching, without requiring any anatomical priors. We further address the problem of occlusion recovery and frame relocalization, relying on the computed features and their descriptors. RESULTS: Experiments were conducted on 10 in-vivo TTTS videos from two different fetal surgery centers. The proposed framework was compared with several state-of-the-art approaches, achieving higher [Formula: see text] on 7 out of 10 videos and a success rate of [Formula: see text] in occlusion recovery. CONCLUSION: This work introduces a learning-based framework for placental mosaicking with occlusion recovery from intra-operative videos using a keypoint-based strategy and features. The proposed framework can compute the placental panorama and recover even in case of camera tracking loss where other methods fail. The results suggest that the proposed framework has large potential to pave the way to creating a surgical navigation system for TTTS by providing robust field-of-view expansion.


Subject(s)
Fetofetal Transfusion , Fetoscopy , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Fetofetal Transfusion/surgery , Fetoscopy/methods , Light Coagulation , Placenta/surgery
5.
Med Image Anal ; 84: 102709, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36549045

ABSTRACT

We propose an endoscopic image mosaicking algorithm that is robust to light conditioning changes, specular reflections, and feature-less scenes. These conditions are especially common in minimally invasive surgery where the light source moves with the camera to dynamically illuminate close range scenes. This makes it difficult for a single image registration method to robustly track camera motion and then generate consistent mosaics of the expanded surgical scene across different and heterogeneous environments. Instead of relying on one specialised feature extractor or image registration method, we propose to fuse different image registration algorithms according to their uncertainties, formulating the problem as affine pose graph optimisation. This allows to combine landmarks, dense intensity registration, and learning-based approaches in a single framework. To demonstrate our application we consider deep learning-based optical flow, hand-crafted features, and intensity-based registration, however, the framework is general and could take as input other sources of motion estimation, including other sensor modalities. We validate the performance of our approach on three datasets with very different characteristics to highlighting its generalisability, demonstrating the advantages of our proposed fusion framework. While each individual registration algorithm eventually fails drastically on certain surgical scenes, the fusion approach flexibly determines which algorithms to use and in which proportion to more robustly obtain consistent mosaics.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Endoscopy , Humans , Endoscopy/methods , Motion , Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
6.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg ; 17(6): 1125-1134, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35503395

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Fetoscopic laser photocoagulation is a minimally invasive procedure to treat twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome during pregnancy by stopping irregular blood flow in the placenta. Building an image mosaic of the placenta and its network of vessels could assist surgeons to navigate in the challenging fetoscopic environment during the procedure. METHODOLOGY: We propose a fetoscopic mosaicking approach by combining deep learning-based optical flow with robust estimation for filtering inconsistent motions that occurs due to floating particles and specularities. While the current state of the art for fetoscopic mosaicking relies on clearly visible vessels for registration, our approach overcomes this limitation by considering the motion of all consistent pixels within consecutive frames. We also overcome the challenges in applying off-the-shelf optical flow to fetoscopic mosaicking through the use of robust estimation and local refinement. RESULTS: We compare our proposed method against the state-of-the-art vessel-based and optical flow-based image registration methods, and robust estimation alternatives. We also compare our proposed pipeline using different optical flow and robust estimation alternatives. CONCLUSIONS: Through analysis of our results, we show that our method outperforms both the vessel-based state of the art and LK, noticeably when vessels are either poorly visible or too thin to be reliably identified. Our approach is thus able to build consistent placental vessel mosaics in challenging cases where currently available alternatives fail.


Subject(s)
Fetofetal Transfusion , Placenta , Female , Fetofetal Transfusion/diagnostic imaging , Fetofetal Transfusion/surgery , Fetoscopy/methods , Humans , Laser Coagulation/methods , Motion , Placenta/surgery , Pregnancy
7.
Comput Biol Med ; 142: 105169, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34974384

ABSTRACT

Image mosaicking has emerged as a universal technique to broaden the field-of-view of the probe-based confocal laser endomicroscopy (pCLE) imaging system. However, due to the influence of probe-tissue contact forces and optical components on imaging quality, existing mosaicking methods remain insufficient to deal with practical challenges. In this paper, we present the texture encoded sum of conditional variance (TESCV) as a novel similarity metric, and effectively incorporate it into a sequential mosaicking scheme to simultaneously correct rigid probe shift and nonrigid tissue deformation. TESCV combines both intensity dependency and texture relevance to quantify the differences between pCLE image frames, where a discriminative binary descriptor named fully cross-detected local derivative pattern (FCLDP) is designed to extract more detailed structural textures. Furthermore, we also analytically derive the closed-form gradient of TESCV with respect to the transformation variables. Experiments on the circular dataset highlighted the advantage of the TESCV metric in improving mosaicking performance compared with the other four recently published metrics. The comparison with the other four state-of-the-art mosaicking methods on the spiral and manual datasets indicated that the proposed TESCV-based method not only worked stably at different contact forces, but was also suitable for both low- and high-resolution imaging systems. With more accurate and delicate mosaics, the proposed method holds promises to meet clinical demands for intraoperative optical biopsy.


Subject(s)
Endoscopy , Microscopy , Microscopy, Confocal/methods , Microsurgery
9.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 8(5): 054002, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34604440

ABSTRACT

Purpose: Handling low-quality and few-feature medical images is a challenging task in automatic panorama mosaicking. Current mosaicking methods for disordered input images are based on feature point matching, whereas in this case intensity-based registration achieves better performance than feature-point registration methods. We propose a mosaicking method that enables the use of mutual information (MI) registration for mosaicking randomly ordered input images with insufficient features. Approach: Dimensionality reduction is used to map disordered input images into a low dimensional space. Based on the low dimensional representation, the image global correspondence can be recognized efficiently. For adjacent image pairs, we optimize the MI metric for registration. The panorama is then created after image blending. We demonstrate our method on relatively lower-cost handheld devices that acquire images from the retina in vivo, kidney ex vivo, and bladder phantom, all of which contain sparse features. Results: Our method is compared with three baselines: AutoStitch, "dimension reduction + SIFT," and "MI-Only." Our method compared to the first two feature-point based methods exhibits 1.25 (ex vivo microscope dataset) to two times (in vivo retina dataset) rate of mosaic completion, and MI-Only has the lowest complete rate among three datasets. When comparing the subsequent complete mosaics, our target registration errors can be 2.2 and 3.8 times reduced when using the microscopy and bladder phantom datasets. Conclusions: Using dimensional reduction increases the success rate of detecting adjacent images, which makes MI-based registration feasible and narrows the search range of MI optimization. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first mosaicking method that allows automatic stitching of disordered images with intensity-based alignment, which provides more robust and accurate results when there are insufficient features for classic mosaicking methods.

10.
Ann Biomed Eng ; 49(9): 2323-2336, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33880633

ABSTRACT

Optical biopsy methods, such as probe-based endomicroscopy, can be used to identify early-stage gastric cancer in vivo. However, it is difficult to scan a large area of the gastric mucosa for mosaicking during endoscopy. In this work, we propose a miniaturised flexible instrument based on contact-aided compliant mechanisms and fibre Bragg grating (FBG) sensing for intraoperative gastric endomicroscopy. The instrument has a compact design with an outer diameter of 2.7 mm, incorporating a central channel with a diameter of 1.9 mm for the endomicroscopic probe to pass through. Experimental results show that the instrument can achieve raster trajectory scanning over a large tissue surface with a positioning accuracy of 0.5 mm. The tip force sensor provides a 4.6 mN resolution for the axial force and 2.8 mN for transverse forces. Validation with random samples shows that the force sensor can provide consistent and accurate three-axis force detection. Endomicroscopic imaging experiments were conducted, and the flexible instrument performed no gap scanning (mosaicking area more than 3 mm2) and contact force monitoring during scanning, demonstrating the potential of the system in clinical applications.


Subject(s)
Biopsy/instrumentation , Gastroscopy/instrumentation , Microsurgery/instrumentation , Stomach/surgery , Algorithms , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Calibration , Swine
11.
Sensors (Basel) ; 21(6)2021 Mar 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33802766

ABSTRACT

Minimally invasive surgery is widely used because of its tremendous benefits to the patient. However, there are some challenges that surgeons face in this type of surgery, the most important of which is the narrow field of view. Therefore, we propose an approach to expand the field of view for minimally invasive surgery to enhance surgeons' experience. It combines multiple views in real-time to produce a dynamic expanded view. The proposed approach extends the monocular Oriented features from an accelerated segment test and Rotated Binary robust independent elementary features-Simultaneous Localization And Mapping (ORB-SLAM) to work with a multi-camera setup. The ORB-SLAM's three parallel threads, namely tracking, mapping and loop closing, are performed for each camera and new threads are added to calculate the relative cameras' pose and to construct the expanded view. A new algorithm for estimating the optimal inter-camera correspondence matrix from a set of corresponding 3D map points is presented. This optimal transformation is then used to produce the final view. The proposed approach was evaluated using both human models and in vivo data. The evaluation results of the proposed correspondence matrix estimation algorithm prove its ability to reduce the error and to produce an accurate transformation. The results also show that when other approaches fail, the proposed approach can produce an expanded view. In this work, a real-time dynamic field-of-view expansion approach that can work in all situations regardless of images' overlap is proposed. It outperforms the previous approaches and can also work at 21 fps.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Humans , Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures
12.
Data Brief ; 35: 106823, 2021 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33604435

ABSTRACT

Underwater imagery is widely used for a variety of applications in marine biology and environmental sciences, such as classification and mapping of seabed habitats, marine environment monitoring and impact assessment, biogeographic reconstructions in the context of climate change, etc. This approach is relatively simple and cost-effective, allowing the rapid collection of large amounts of data. However, due to the laborious and time-consuming manual analysis procedure, only a small part of the information stored in the archives of underwater images is retrieved. Emerging novel deep learning methods open up the opportunity for more effective, accurate and rapid analysis of seabed images than ever before. We present annotated images of the bottom macrofauna obtained from underwater video recorded in Spitsbergen island's European Arctic waters, Svalbard Archipelago. Our videos were filmed in both the photic and aphotic zones of polar waters, often influenced by melting glaciers. We used artificial lighting and shot close to the seabed (<1 m) to preserve natural colours and avoid the distorting effect of muddy water. The underwater video footage was captured using a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) and a drop-down camera. The footage was converted to 2D mosaic images of the seabed. 2D mosaics were manually annotated by several experts using the Labelbox tool and co-annotations were refined using the SurveyJS platform. A set of carefully annotated underwater images associated with the original videos can be used by marine biologists as a biological atlas, as well as practitioners in the fields of machine vision, pattern recognition, and deep learning as training materials for the development of various tools for automatic analysis of underwater imagery.

13.
Appl Plant Sci ; 8(8): e11387, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32995105

ABSTRACT

PREMISE: Aerial imagery from small unmanned aerial vehicle systems is a promising approach for high-throughput phenotyping and precision agriculture. A key requirement for both applications is to create a field-scale mosaic of the aerial imagery sequence so that the same features are in registration, a very challenging problem for crop imagery. METHODS: We have developed an improved mosaicking pipeline, Video Mosaicking and summariZation (VMZ), which uses a novel two-dimensional mosaicking algorithm that minimizes errors in estimating the transformations between successive frames during registration. The VMZ pipeline uses only the imagery, rather than relying on vehicle telemetry, ground control points, or global positioning system data, to estimate the frame-to-frame homographies. It exploits the spatiotemporal ordering of the image frames to reduce the computational complexity of finding corresponding features between frames using feature descriptors. We compared the performance of VMZ to a standard two-dimensional mosaicking algorithm (AutoStitch) by mosaicking imagery of two maize (Zea mays) research nurseries freely flown with a variety of trajectories. RESULTS: The VMZ pipeline produces superior mosaics faster. Using the speeded up robust features (SURF) descriptor, VMZ produces the highest-quality mosaics. DISCUSSION: Our results demonstrate the value of VMZ for the future automated extraction of plant phenotypes and dynamic scouting for crop management.

14.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg ; 15(11): 1807-1816, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32808148

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Fetoscopic laser photocoagulation is a minimally invasive surgical procedure used to treat twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS), which involves localization and ablation of abnormal vascular connections on the placenta to regulate the blood flow in both fetuses. This procedure is particularly challenging due to the limited field of view, poor visibility, occasional bleeding, and poor image quality. Fetoscopic mosaicking can help in creating an image with the expanded field of view which could facilitate the clinicians during the TTTS procedure. METHODS: We propose a deep learning-based mosaicking framework for diverse fetoscopic videos captured from different settings such as simulation, phantoms, ex vivo, and in vivo environments. The proposed mosaicking framework extends an existing deep image homography model to handle video data by introducing the controlled data generation and consistent homography estimation modules. Training is performed on a small subset of fetoscopic images which are independent of the testing videos. RESULTS: We perform both quantitative and qualitative evaluations on 5 diverse fetoscopic videos (2400 frames) that captured different environments. To demonstrate the robustness of the proposed framework, a comparison is performed with the existing feature-based and deep image homography methods. CONCLUSION: The proposed mosaicking framework outperformed existing methods and generated meaningful mosaic, while reducing the accumulated drift, even in the presence of visual challenges such as specular highlights, reflection, texture paucity, and low video resolution.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Fetofetal Transfusion/surgery , Fetoscopy/methods , Laser Coagulation/methods , Placenta/surgery , Computer Simulation , Female , Humans , Phantoms, Imaging , Pregnancy
15.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 7(4): 044001, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32715023

ABSTRACT

Purpose: Peripheral retinal lesions substantially increase the risk of diabetic retinopathy and retinopathy of prematurity. The peripheral changes can be visualized in wide field imaging, which is obtained by combining multiple images with an overlapping field of view using mosaicking methods. However, a robust and accurate registration of mosaicking techniques for normal angle fundus cameras is still a challenge due to the random selection of matching points and execution time. We propose a method of retinal image mosaicking based on scale-invariant feature transformation (SIFT) feature descriptor and Voronoi diagram. Approach: In our method, the SIFT algorithm is used to describe local features in the input images. Then the input images are subdivided into regions based on the Voronoi method. Each pair of Voronoi regions is matched by the method zero mean normalized cross correlation. After matching, the retinal images are mapped into the same coordinate system to form a mosaic image. The success rate and the mean registration error (RE) of our method were compared with those of other state-of-the-art methods for the P category of the fundus image registration database. Results: Experimental results show that the proposed method accurately registered 42% of retinal image pairs with a mean RE of 3.040 pixels, while a lower success rate was observed in the other four state-of-the-art retinal image registration methods GDB-ICP (33%), Harris-PIIFD (0%), HM-2016 (0%), and HM-2017 (2%). Conclusions: The proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art methods in terms of quality and running time and reduces the computational complexity.

16.
Sensors (Basel) ; 20(7)2020 Mar 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32224939

ABSTRACT

Image mosaicking which is a process of constructing multiple orthoimages into a single seamless composite orthoimage, is one of the key steps for the production of large-scale digital orthophoto maps (DOM). Seamline determination is one of the most difficult technologies in the automatic mosaicking of orthoimages. The seamlines that follow the centerlines of roads where no significant differences exist are beneficial to improve the quality of image mosaicking. Based on this idea, this paper proposes a novel method of seamline determination based on road probability map from the D-LinkNet neural network for urban image mosaicking. This method optimizes the seamlines at both the semantic and pixel level as follows. First, the road probability map is obtained with the D-LinkNet neural network and related post processing. Second, the preferred road areas (PRAs) are determined by binarizing the road probability map of the overlapping area in the left and right image. The PRAs are the priority areas in which the seamlines cross. Finally, the final seamlines are determined by Dijkstra's shortest path algorithm implemented with binary min-heap at the pixel level. The experimental results of three group data sets show the advantages of the proposed method. Compared with two previous methods, the seamlines obtained by the proposed method pass through the less obvious objects and mainly follow the roads. In terms of the computational efficiency, the proposed method also has a high efficiency.

17.
J Biophotonics ; 13(6): e202000048, 2020 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32246558

ABSTRACT

Handheld and endoscopic optical-sectioning microscopes are being developed for noninvasive screening and intraoperative consultation. Imaging a large extent of tissue is often desired, but miniature in vivo microscopes tend to suffer from limited fields of view. To extend the imaging field during clinical use, we have developed a real-time video mosaicking method, which allows users to efficiently survey larger areas of tissue. Here, we modified a previous post-processing mosaicking method so that real-time mosaicking is possible at >30 frames/second when using a device that outputs images that are 400 × 400 pixels in size. Unlike other real-time mosaicking methods, our strategy can accommodate image rotations and deformations that often occur during clinical use of a handheld microscope. We perform a feasibility study to demonstrate that the use of real-time mosaicking is necessary to enable efficient sampling of a desired imaging field when using a handheld dual-axis confocal microscope.


Subject(s)
Intravital Microscopy , Microscopy , Endoscopy , Microscopy, Confocal
18.
J Biomed Opt ; 25(2): 1-13, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32100492

ABSTRACT

SIGNIFICANCE: Confocal laser scanning enables optical sectioning in clinical fiber bundle endomicroscopes, but lower-cost, simplified endomicroscopes use widefield incoherent illumination instead. Optical sectioning can be introduced in these simple systems using structured illumination microscopy (SIM), a multiframe digital subtraction process. However, SIM results in artifacts when the probe is in motion, making the technique difficult to use in vivo and preventing the use of mosaicking to synthesize a larger effective field of view (FOV). AIM: We report and validate an automatic motion compensation technique to overcome motion artifacts and allow generation of mosaics in SIM endomicroscopy. APPROACH: Motion compensation is achieved using image registration and real-time pattern orientation correction via a digital micromirror device. We quantify the similarity of moving probe reconstructions to those acquired with a stationary probe using the relative mean of the absolute differences (MAD). We further demonstrate mosaicking with a moving probe in mechanical and freehand operation. RESULTS: Reconstructed SIM images show an improvement in the MAD from 0.85 to 0.13 for lens paper and from 0.27 to 0.12 for bovine tissue. Mosaics also show vastly reduced artifacts. CONCLUSION: The reduction in motion artifacts in individual SIM reconstructions leads to mosaics that more faithfully represent the morphology of tissue, giving clinicians a larger effective FOV than the probe itself can provide.


Subject(s)
Fiber Optic Technology/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Microscopy/instrumentation , Artifacts , Computer Systems , Equipment Design , Lighting , Motion
19.
J Biomed Opt ; 24(12): 1-9, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31828983

ABSTRACT

Live-subject microscopies, including microendoscopy and other related technologies, offer promise for basic biology research as well as the optical biopsy of disease in the clinic. However, cellular resolution generally comes with the trade-off of a microscopic field-of-view. Microimage mosaicking enables stitching many small scenes together to aid visualization, quantitative interpretation, and mapping of microscale features, for example, to guide surgical intervention. The development of hyperspectral and multispectral systems for biomedical applications provides motivation for adapting mosaicking algorithms to process a number of simultaneous spectral channels. We present an algorithm that mosaics multichannel video by correlating channels of consecutive frames as a basis for efficiently calculating image alignments. We characterize the noise tolerance of the algorithm by using simulated video with known ground-truth alignments to quantify mosaicking accuracy and speed, showing that multiplexed molecular imaging enhances mosaic accuracy by leveraging observations of distinct molecular constituents to inform frame alignment. A simple mathematical model is introduced to characterize the noise suppression provided by a given group of spectral channels, thus predicting the performance of selected subsets of data channels in order to balance mosaic computation accuracy and speed. The characteristic noise tolerance of a given number of channels is shown to improve through selection of an optimal subset of channels that maximizes this model. We also demonstrate that the multichannel algorithm produces higher quality mosaics than the analogous single-channel methods in an empirical test case. To compensate for the increased data rate of hyperspectral video compared to single-channel systems, we employ parallel processing via GPUs to alleviate computational bottlenecks and to achieve real-time mosaicking even for video-rate multichannel systems anticipated in the future. This implementation paves the way for real-time multichannel mosaicking to accompany next-generation hyperspectral and multispectral video microscopy.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Microscopy/methods , Algorithms , Animals , Dogs , Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells , Microscopy, Video/methods
20.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 6(3): 035001, 2019 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31403054

ABSTRACT

Twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome is a condition in which identical twins share a certain pattern of vascular connections in the placenta. This leads to an imbalance in the blood flow that, if not treated, may result in a fatal outcome for both twins. To treat this condition, a surgeon explores the placenta with a fetoscope to find and photocoagulate all intertwin vascular connections. However, the reduced field of view of the fetoscope complicates their localization and general overview. A much more effective exploration could be achieved with an online mosaic created at exploration time. Currently, accurate, globally consistent algorithms such as bundle adjustment cannot be used due to their offline nature, while online algorithms lack sufficient accuracy. We introduce two pruning strategies facilitating the use of bundle adjustment in a sequential fashion: (1) a technique that efficiently exploits the potential of using an electromagnetic tracking system to avoid unnecessary matching attempts between spatially inconsistent image pairs, and (2) an aggregated representation of images, which we refer to as superframes, that allows decreasing the computational complexity of a globally consistent approach. Quantitative and qualitative results on synthetic and phantom-based datasets demonstrate a better trade-off between efficiency and accuracy.

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