Title :
Mesh optimization of vessel surface model for computer-aided simulation of percutaneous coronary intervention
Author :
Fan Yang ; Zeng-Guang Hou ; Shao-Hua Mi ; Gui-Bin Bian ; Xiao-Liang Xie
Author_Institution :
State Key Lab. of Manage. & Control for Complex Syst., Inst. of Autom., Beijing, China
Abstract :
Percutaneous coronary intervention is the gold standard to coronary diseases in the past decades due to much less trauma and quick recovery. However, due to the traits of minimal invasiveness, clinicians have to defeat the difficulties in eye-hand coordination during the procedure, which also makes it a non-trivial task in the catheterization lab. The computer-aided surgical simulation is designed to provide a reliable tool for the early stage of the training of the procedure. In this simulation system, the surface model of the vessels contribute the major part in the virtual anatomic environment. On the other hand, heavy interactions between the virtual surgical tools and the model surface occur during the training. In order to achieve acceptable performances, the patient-specific vessel surface model needs further process to adapt to this situation. We proposed in this paper an approach to optimize the meshes that consist the surface model with its application in consideration. The connectivity of the surface model is firstly checked. Next a smooth processing is applied without modifying the geometry of the largest-connected surface. Then the quantities of the polygons consisting the model surface are eliminated both dramatically and appropriately. The resultant surface model is applied in the validation test interacting with the virtual guidewire.
Keywords :
biomedical education; blood vessels; cardiology; computer based training; continuing professional development; diseases; educational aids; geometry; medical computing; optimisation; physiological models; smoothing methods; surgery; virtual reality; computer-aided surgical simulation; coronary diseases; early surgical training stage; eye-hand coordination difficulty; largest-connected surface geometry; mesh optimization; minimal invasiveness; nontrivial catheterization lab task; patient recovery; patient-specific vessel surface model; percutaneous coronary intervention; polygon quantity; smooth processing; surface model connectivity; trauma; validation test; vessels surface model; virtual anatomic environment; virtual guidewire; virtual surgical tool-model surface interactions; Computational modeling; Geometry; Robots; Smoothing methods; Solid modeling; Surface treatment; Training;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6945171