Quantifying in vivo motion in video sequences using image registration
Image registration is a pivotal part of many medical imaging analysis systems that provide clinically relevant medical information. One fundamental problem addressed by image registration is the accounting of a subjects motion. This dissertation broadly addresses the problem of quantifying in vivo m...
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Format: | Others |
Language: | en |
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VANDERBILT
2014
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Online Access: | http://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-11212014-132445/ |
Summary: | Image registration is a pivotal part of many medical imaging analysis systems that provide clinically relevant medical information. One fundamental problem addressed by image registration is the accounting of a subjects motion. This dissertation broadly addresses the problem of quantifying in vivo motion in video sequences for two different applications using image registration. The first problem involves the correction of motion in in vivo time-series microscopy imaging of islets of Langerhans in mice. The second problem focuses on delivering near real-time 3D intraoperative movements of the cortical surface to a computational biomechanical model framework for the compensation of brain shift during brain tumor surgery. For the first application, a fully automatic algorithm is developed for the correction of in vivo time-series microscopy images of islets of Langerhans. The second application focuses on delivering near real-time 3D intraoperative movements of the cortical surface to a computational biomechanical model framework for the compensation of brain shift during brain tumor surgery. This dissertation demonstrates a clinical microscope-based digitization platform capable of reliably providing temporally dense 3D textured point clouds in near real-time of the FOV for the entire duration and under realistic conditions of neurosurgery. A fully automatic technique has been developed for robustly digitizing 3D points intraoperatively using an operating microscope at 1Hz. Another algorithm has been developed for tracking points on the cortical surface intraoperatively, which can potentially deliver intraoperative 3D displacements of the cortical surface at different time points during brain tumor surgery. |
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