The invention relates to the field of fluoroscopy imaging. In particular, the invention relates to a method for highlighting of intervention objects for fluoroscopy imaging, a relating imaging system, a program element and a computer readable medium.
In fluoroscopy imaging, wire tips and balloon/stent markers are the main landmarks used by cardiologists for navigation and precise stent placement. Because they are semi radio-opaque, the visibility of said landmarks can become quite low for several reasons. The fluoroscopy pictures may be very noisy, the tips and balloon/stent markers may be located in dark areas of the image or still in the catheter tube (i.e. in a low contrast area), or masked by the vessel trace during a shot of contrast agent. Further, the tips and balloon/stent markers may be masked by a vessel map overlaid onto the live picture by an automatic cardiac roadmapping system.
The imaging method may be used by an imaging system for Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA) in catheter laboratories, to treat cardiac stenoses. A description of the basic interventional procedure in this field can be found in “Algorithmic Solutions for Live Device-to-Vessel Match”, J. Bredno, B. Martin-Leung & K. Eck, Proceedings of SPIE—Volume 5370—Medical Imaging 2004: Image Processing, J. Michael Fitzpatrick, Milan Sonka, Editors, May 2004, pp. 1486-1497: “After a catheter is inserted into the vascular system at an access site, it is advanced along large vessels to the vascular structure that requires treatment. Contrast agent is injected via the catheter and [further] x-ray equipment records an angiographic sequence that shows the vessels when filled with contrast agent. The diagnostic angiogram acquisitions can be repeated with varying imager geometries. Diagnosis and intervention planning are based on such diagnostic angiograms ( . . . ). During intervention, a flexible, partially or fully radio-opaque guidewire is advanced to the affected vascular structures (e.g. stenoses in coronaries, neurovascular aneurisms, or arterio-venous malformations). Fluoroscopic low-dose x-ray surveillance visualizes the guidewire ( . . . ) and allows for the hand-eye-coordination of the interventionalist while advancing the guidewire. When positioned, the guidewire serves as rail to deliver interventional devices (e.g. balloons for dilation and stent delivery, detachable coils for aneurysm clotting). The delivery and deployment of the interventional devices is also fluoroscopy-controlled.” In such procedures, the vessel structure itself is not visible during the intervention as it is not radio-opaque. Consequently, the navigation and precise positioning of guidewire and interventional devices may be tedious, time-consuming, and requires additional contrast agent bursts to clarify the position of the devices relative to the relevant vessels.”
In “X-ray fluoroscopy spation-temporal filtering with object detection”, Aufrichtig et al., Medical Imaging; IEEE Transactions, Volume 14, Issue 4, Dec. 1995, Pages 733-746, a spatio-temporal filtering with object detection, is described that reduces noise while minimizing motion and spatial blur. Object-likelihood images are created to use these to control spatial and recursive temporal filtering such as to reduce blurring the objects of interest.
It may be desirable to provide an augmented visibility of objects of interest in a grey scale raster image.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a method for highlighting an object of interest in a first raster image of grey scale value pixels is provided. The method comprising the steps of selecting of the object of interest in the raster image and darkening the object of interest with a grey scale value using a predetermined darkening strength parameter. One feature of the embodiment may be to provide an operators with an augmented visibility of the objects of interest (catheters, wire guide tips, balloon/stent markers) by smoothly darkening them. Since X-Ray images are in grey levels and objects of interest are semi-opaque, a controlled darkening operation produces a natural-looking result, while not being gaze-catching. Thus, an always possible misdetection of objects may not lead to disturbing artefacts. The darkening operation can be adaptive to the presence of contrast agent or local image characteristics.
According to an other exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a method for highlighting an object of interest in a first raster image of grey scale value pixels is provided. The method comprises the steps: detecting of the object of interest in the raster image, obtaining a darkening grey scale value, and darkening the object of interest with the darkening grey scale value.
In one embodiment of the invention a plurality of different or equal darkening grey scale values are obtained and used for darkening a plurality of object pixels or all object pixels of the detected objects.
According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, the darkening grey scale value is obtained from a predetermined darkening strength parameter.
According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, the method further comprises the step of obtaining detection information from said detecting of the object of interest in the raster image. On top of producing a mask image of the detected pixels, the detection process might also produces detection information such as a confidence map that contains, for every detected pixel, a value indicating how confident the detection algorithm is of being correct. The detection process often consists in thresholding an enhanced image where the enhancement value can directly be used to qualify the detection information, e.g. the degree of detection confidence.
According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, the detection information is configured as one of the group consisting of data of localisation, data of topology, data of local or global confident measurement.
According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, the grey scale value is obtained from the obtained detection information.
According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, the grey scale value is weighted by the detection information.
According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, the darkening grey scale value is obtained from a predetermined darkening strength parameter and the detection information.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, an imaging system for examination of an object of interest, the imaging system comprises a detector unit, adapted to detect the object of interest in a raster image and a picture composer, adapted to darken the object of interest with a grey scale value using a predetermined darkening strength parameter. The imaging system may be implemented into automatic cardiac road mapping systems or used for any fluoroscopy application.
Further, the image system may comprise a processor unit, adapted to determine the darkening strength parameter. In addition or instead, the system may comprise a local image analyser or/and a contrast agent monitoring device.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, a computer-readable medium, in which a computer program for highlighting an object of interest is stored which, when being executed by a processor, is adapted to carry out the steps of detecting of the object of interest in the raster image, determining a darkening strength parameter for the object of interest, and darkening the object of interest with a grey scale value using the determined darkening strength parameter.
According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, a program element for highlighting an object of interest is provided, which, when being executed by a processor, is adapted to carry out the steps of detecting of the object of interest in the raster image, determining a darkening strength parameter for the object of interest and darkening the object of interest with a grey scale value using the determined darkening strength parameter.
One aspect of the embodiment may be that the method further comprises the step of generating object pixel data of the detected object in an object mask image.
Another aspect of the embodiment may be that the method further comprises the steps of monitoring object-surrounding presence and/or concentration of contrast agent and determining the darkening strength parameter using the monitored presence and/or concentration values of contrast agent.
Yet another aspect may be that the method further comprises the steps of acquiring object-surrounding local image area properties, and analysing the acquired local image area properties, determining the darkening strength parameter using the acquired image area properties.
In yet another embodiment the local image area properties include the mean grey scale value, determined from grey scale values of a plurality of object surrounding pixel, and/or the mean contrast value of a plurality of object surrounding pixel.
In yet another aspect the darkening strength parameter is used globally for the darkening of the object of interest.
In another aspect a plurality of different grey scale values using the predetermined darkening strength is used for the darkening of the object of interest.
Yet another aspect of the method may be that the method further comprises the steps of composing a final picture, using the first raster image, the determined darkening strength parameter and the generated object mask image.
In another aspect of the method the object of interest is an artificial device used for intra-coronary surveillance, precisely, the object of interest is configured as one of the group consisting of a catheter, a wire guide tip, a balloon marker and a stent marker.
Apart from the said aspects and embodiments, several other embodiments can be foreseen. A local image analyzer and a contrast agent monitor are both optional devices of the imaging system . In a simpler embodiment, the system may just comprise an object detector and a picture composer.
The object detection and mask composition can be carried out simultaneous, and not only sequential in another aspect. Further the presence of object masks/maps are not mandatory, a composer device of the imaging system could take as input any data representing the location and/or appearance of particular objects, like chained lists of pixels, splines, coordinates of markers, to darken/highlighting the objects accordingly. Further, different darkening algorithms can be used.
These and other aspects of the present invention will become apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention will be described in the following, with reference to the following drawings.
The illustration in the drawings is schematically. In different drawings, similar or identical elements are provided with the same reference numerals.
Four different cardiologic grey scale X-ray live images of a patient with a visible wire tip in a catheter tube are shown in
The shown low visibility problem may result in longer visual accommodation time for the cardiologists, requiring longer X-Ray expositions. Therefore the radiation absorbed by patients and operators may increase unnecessarily.
One solution could consist in using coloured overlays on the live X-Ray image to highlight the objects of interest, as shown in the next four images of
This is particularly apparent on
The live images from the left each shows a wire tip, which is on the right highlighted by a white overlay. Here, the first row is a false alarm, the second one a bad segmentation. Thus, the segmented portion of the images on the left may not be consistent from one frame to the other in the image video sequence. It is therefore highly desirable to be able to increase the visibility of opaque objects of interest such as wire tips in a more natural manner that may also limits the annoyance of object misdetections.
For the purpose of object detection, techniques such as multiscale enhancement of dark objects and thresholding as described in “Multiscale Vessel Enhancement and Filtering”, A. Frangi et al., Lecture Notes Computer Science, vol. 1496, pp 130-137, 1998, can be used. The live picture 100 is fed into an object detector 200, which produces a map (or a mask) image 400 for each type of object (catheter, wire guide tip, balloon/stent markers), where pixels indicate the presence or absence of the considered object. For instance,
The object mask is fed into the local image analyzer 300 which computes the properties of the pixels in the neighbourhood of the object of interest/tip. Such properties may include the local mean luminance or the local contrast measured at the tip, to better adapt the darkening operation to the human visual system. The analyser 300 determines the strength of the darkening operation for the picture composer 600, which can be in the form of a single parameter applied globally for the darkening of the tip pixels, or a strength pixel map representing parameters applied individually to each of the pixels under the tip and its neighbourhood.
Picture composer/Darkening of objects
Several algorithms are possible to darken the pixels under the tip mask in the picture composer 600. Here, only one is described according to
The tip mask shown in the upper right of an live image which is shown in the upper left of
It can be seen in the last two rows of
In a second simpler embodiment, shown in
It should be noted that the term “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps and the “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. Also elements described in association with different embodiments may be combined.
It should also be noted that reference signs in the claims shall not be construed as limiting the scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07114468.7 | Aug 2007 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2008/053217 | 8/12/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/12/2010 |