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Pelvis Surface Estimation From Partial CT for Computer-Aided Pelvic Osteotomies

Authors :
Grupp, Robert
Otake, Yoshito
Murphy, Ryan
Parvizi, Javad
Armand, Mehran
Taylor, Russell
Source :
In Orthopaedic Proceedings 2016 Feb (Vol. 98, No. SUPP_5, pp. 55-55). The British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Computer-aided surgical systems commonly use preoperative CT scans when performing pelvic osteotomies for intraoperative navigation. These systems have the potential to improve the safety and accuracy of pelvic osteotomies, however, exposing the patient to radiation is a significant drawback. In order to reduce radiation exposure, we propose a new smooth extrapolation method leveraging a partial pelvis CT and a statistical shape model (SSM) of the full pelvis in order to estimate a patient's complete pelvis. A SSM of normal, complete, female pelvis anatomy was created and evaluated from 42 subjects. A leave-one-out test was performed to characterise the inherent generalisation capability of the SSM. An additional leave-one-out test was conducted to measure performance of the smooth extrapolation method and an existing "cut-and-paste" extrapolation method. Unknown anatomy was simulated by keeping the axial slices of the patient's acetabulum intact and varying the amount of the superior iliac crest retained; from 0% to 15% of the total pelvis extent. The smooth technique showed an average improvement over the cut-and-paste method of 1.31 mm and 3.61 mm, in RMS and maximum surface error, respectively. With 5% of the iliac crest retained, the smoothly estimated surface had an RMS surface error of 2.21 mm, an improvement of 1.25 mm when retaining none of the iliac crest. This anatomical estimation method creates the possibility of a patient and surgeon benefiting from the use of a CAS system and simultaneously reducing the patient's radiation exposure.<br />Comment: CAOS 2015 Extended Paper

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
In Orthopaedic Proceedings 2016 Feb (Vol. 98, No. SUPP_5, pp. 55-55). The British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1909.10452
Document Type :
Working Paper