The invention relates to a magnetic localization device comprising a field generator and a field sensor, an examination device with such a localization device as well as a method for position measurement with such a magnetic localization device.
Magnetic localization devices are used especially in medical examinations to determine the position of instruments such as a catheter in a patient's body, without requiring constant X-ray radiation for this purpose. What is problematic here, however, is that the location measurements of such localization devices can be easily hampered by external magnetic fields or distortions of the measuring field. In this context, there is proposed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,636,757 B1 to position the field generator adjacent a shield at known distorting objects, such as metallic devices, such that the field distortion is suppressed and any movements of the distortion source are followed. The disadvantage here is, however, that it is necessary to intervene in the design of the imaging devices, involving high expenditure, giving rise to additional costs and making post-fitting of existing systems difficult.
Against this background, it was an object of the present invention to provide means for facilitating correction for external field distortions in a magnetic localization device.
The magnetic localization device as invented comprises the following components:
The advantage of the described magnetic localization device is that it allows in a simple way to correct external field distortions. This can be done by measuring the signals of a reference sensor, so that the field distortions can be deduced by comparing the position of the reference sensor thus determined with its known, real position. This information can in turn be used for the desired compensation of the measured relative position of the field sensor.
The localization device is especially suitable for use in combination with X-ray computer tomography (CT), because considerable dynamic field distortions are generated by the rotating components (tube, detector). Optionally, in this case, the field generator and/or the reference sensor are fastened to the gantry of the computer tomograph. Preferably, both parts are fastened to the gantry, so possible inclination movements of the gantry are copied by them synchronously and thus there is no relative change in the path of the field.
The control unit preferably has a memory, in which a calibration function is stored, which provides a correction shift for the field sensor position determined without correction for external field distortions (directly or not directly), depending on the measured signals of the reference sensor and the field sensor. The addition of this correction shift to the uncorrected position of the field sensor determined by the conventional methods provides an exact estimate for the real position of the field sensor, in which particularly external field distortions have been corrected.
Furthermore, the invention relates to an examination device which comprises the following components:
Furthermore, the invention relates to a method for position measurement with a magnetic localization device, which method comprises the following steps of:
The method relates in general to the steps that can be executed with a localization device of the type described above. With respect to details, advantages and further features, reference is made to the above description.
According to a preferred embodiment of the method, a correction function is determined, which indicates a correction shift for said uncorrected position of the field sensor based on the signal of the reference sensor and of the uncorrected determined position of the field sensor. The uncorrected position of the field sensor is determined by the conventional methods. The position of the field sensor may particularly be concluded from the (known) field configuration of the field generator. The implicit assumption here is that the field configuration generated by the field generator is undistorted. As this generally does not conform to reality, a correction shift is additionally determined, which is to be added to the uncorrected position of the field sensor to obtain a better estimate for the real position of the field sensor.
According to a further aspect of the above-mentioned method, the correction function is first empirically determined for the support points in a volume of interest, i.e. through measurements of the field present there with the help of a probe sensor, whose actual spatial position is re-measured exactly in each case by using other means as well as by parallel measurement of the signals of the reference sensor. The information available for the support points (measured and real position of the probe sensor, reference sensor signal) is then extended by extrapolation or interpolation on the entire volume of interest, in order to obtain a roughly valid correction function in this manner.
Furthermore, a (uni- or multidimensional) parameter can be determined from the measurement signal of the reference sensor, which characterizes the external field distortion. This parameter can then be used as a variable in the above-mentioned correction function, to reflect the effect of the reference sensor there.
The above-mentioned parameter can especially describe the angle of rotation of a computer tomograph that is situated in the vicinity of the localization device. It is seen that the field distortions exerted by such a computer tomograph are primarily dependent on the angle of rotation, because important field-generating or field-distorting components, such as the detector area, rotate along with the computer tomograph. If necessary, the functional correlation between the signals from the reference sensor and the angle of rotation can also be determined empirically or adaptively.
The invention will be explained below by way of example with the help of attached figures. In the drawings,
The situation shown in
The computer tomograph 1 usually comprises a circular gantry, in which an X-ray source 1a as well as an X-ray detector 1b opposite to it are supported such that they can be rotated by the angle of rotation Φ with respect to the central axis of the device. Two-dimensional section images or three-dimensional volume data can be generated by the computer tomograph 1 from a volume of interest VOI inside the ring.
Furthermore, a magnetic localization device is available which contains a field generator 2 for generating a temporally and spatially inhomogeneous magnetic field in the volume of interest VOI as well as a field sensor 4. The field sensor 4 measures the size of the magnetic field generated by the field generator 2, thus making it possible to deduce its position x (with a known position of the field generator 2) in this manner. The field sensor 4 can, for example, be fixed to the tip of a catheter (not shown), which is to be navigated in the vascular system of a patient. The position of the field sensor 4 determined with the help of the localization device can then be used, for example, so as to represent the current position of the catheter on a (static) vessel map.
Furthermore, the field generator 2 as well as the field sensor 4 is linked to a control unit 5 (for example a microcomputer). The required calculations for determining the (uncorrected) position x of the field sensor 4 take place in the control unit 5.
In the method described so far, one encounters the problem that the determined position of the field sensor 4 is erroneous owing to distortions of the magnetic field. Such distortions particularly arise owing to the X-ray source 1a as well as the detector 1b of the computer tomograph 1, where the distortions dynamically change with the current angle of rotation Φ of the computer tomograph 1.
In order to improve the accuracy of localization of the field sensor 4 in view of this situation, it is proposed here to use a reference sensor 3, which is placed at a known position relative to the field generator 2. Due to the dynamic distortions of the magnetic field owing to the rotation of the computer tomograph 1, the measured position of the reference sensor 3 apparently moves on a closed trajectory r(Φ), which is shown in
The current angle of rotation Φ can be calculated from the measurement signals of the reference sensor 3 by connecting the reference sensor 3 to the control unit 5. This information can then also be used for correcting the (uncorrected) position measurement value x of the field sensor 4 in relation to the rotation of the computer tomograph 1. A correction function δ(x, Φ) is thereby preferably used for the correction, where the corrected position x′ of the field sensor 4 is calculated from its uncorrected position x by the formula x′=x+δ(x, Φ). This correlation is shown in
The correction function δ(x, Φ) can, for example, be determined empirically, if the apparent trajectory r(Φ) of the reference sensor 3 shown in
As can further be seen in the
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04100639 | Feb 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2005/050530 | 2/11/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/16/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/082247 | 9/9/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080157755 A1 | Jul 2008 | US |