Title :
Surface Mosaics of the Bladder Reconstructed From Endoscopic Video for Automated Surveillance
Author :
Soper, Timothy D. ; Porter, Michael P. ; Seibel, Eric J.
Author_Institution :
Human Photonics Lab., Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
fDate :
6/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Flexible cystoscopy is frequently performed for recurrent bladder cancer surveillance, making it the most expensive cancer to treat over the patient´s lifetime. An automated bladder surveillance system is being developed to robotically scan the bladder surface using an ultrathin and highly flexible endoscope. Such a system would allow cystoscopic procedures to be overseen by technical staff while urologists could review cystoscopic video postoperatively. In this paper, we demonstrate a method for reconstructing the surface of the whole bladder from endoscopic video using structure from motion. Video is acquired from a custom ultrathin and highly flexible endoscope that can retroflex to image the entire internal surface of the bladder. Selected frames are subsequently stitched into a mosaic and mapped to a reconstructed surface, creating a 3-D surface model of the bladder that can be expediently reviewed. Our software was tested on endoscopic video of an excised pig bladder. The resulting reconstruction possessed a projection error of 1.66 pixels on average and covered 99.6% of the bladder surface area.
Keywords :
cancer; endoscopes; image reconstruction; medical image processing; surface reconstruction; video surveillance; 3D surface model; automated surveillance; bladder cancer surveillance; bladder reconstruction; bladder surface area; cancer treatment; custom ultrathin endoscope; cystoscopic procedures; cystoscopic video; endoscopic video; excised pig bladder; flexible cystoscopy; highly flexible endoscope; internal surface; projection error; surface mosaics; surface reconstruction; technical staff while urologists; whole bladder; Bladder; Endoscopes; Image reconstruction; Software; Surface reconstruction; Surveillance; Three dimensional displays; Bundle adjustment; cystoscopy; endoscopy; image processing; image stitching; structure from motion (SfM); surface reconstruction; video processing; Algorithms; Animals; Cystoscopy; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Pattern Recognition, Automated; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Swine; Urinary Bladder; Video Recording;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2012.2191783