The present disclosure relates to the subject matter disclosed in German application number 10 2008 023 218.1 of May 10, 2008, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety and for all purposes.
The invention relates to a method for extracorporeal examination of a body with an ultrasound head, in which a plurality of ultrasound emitters which are placed next to one another and emit ultrasonic radiation in a common central plane of the ultrasound head, and a plurality of ultrasound receivers are arranged in a row.
The examination of body structures with ultrasound is a standard method enabling determination of the position and shape of a body structure, for example, the position of the front iliac crests and the pubic bone on the pelvis. The examination is normally carried out with an ultrasound head in which quite a large number of ultrasound emitters and ultrasound receivers which emit and receive ultrasonic radiation in a common central plane of the ultrasound head are arranged in a row. During the examination, a person guiding the ultrasound head can incline it in relation to the body so that the structure to be examined, for example, the iliac crest, is optimally represented on a display of the ultrasound examination device. However, inaccuracies in the localizing of the geometrical structures of the body occur owing to the fact that the ultrasound head may be differently orientated relative to the body, i.e., the reproducibility is limited.
An object of the invention is to so improve a generic method that the reproducibility of the examination results is increased.
This object is accomplished, in accordance with the invention, in a method of the kind described at the outset, wherein with the use of prominent points of the body, a geometrical structure which is defined by these prominent points is determined, and the ultrasound head is positioned relative to this geometrical structure in a defined orientation in which the ultrasound examination is performed on the body.
Accordingly, during the examination the orientation of the ultrasound head is no longer freely selectable and determined solely by the quality of the representation on a display device, but rather this orientation is limited by the ultrasound head being able to assume only a certain orientation in relation to a geometrical structure of the body, however, slight deviations from this prescribed orientation of the ultrasound head may, of course, be tolerable.
This method results in the ultrasound head assuming a similar orientation relative to the body in all examinations, even though the position of the ultrasound head can be varied, i.e., the ultrasound head is displaced substantially parallel to itself on the body surface in order to examine the body structures.
The geometrical structure defined by the prominent points can be determined before the actual ultrasound examination, and the prominent points can be determined in an optional way, for example, using a navigated palpation instrument or an ultrasound head, which is then freely orientated in the conventional way relative to the body and at first does not assume the prescribed preferential orientation relative to the body structure. The results of this determination of the position of the prominent points of the body do not need to be very precise, such an approximate determination of the position of the prominent points being sufficient. Selected geometrical structures can then be determined with the position data of these prominent points. For example, these geometrical structures can be formed by a straight line joining the two prominent points to each other or by a plane spanned by three such prominent points.
The straight line joining the proximal joint head of a femur and a point indicating the position of the knee joint, for example, palpated through the position of the patella, can be given as example of a straight line. The determination of the frontal plane of the pelvis, determinable by palpating the upper iliac crests and the pubic bone, can serve as example of a geometrical structure in the form of a plane, always with the limitation that this position determination is only an approximate determination of the position of these geometrical structures, as the determination of the position of the prominent points is carried out with a relatively low degree of precision.
Nevertheless, geometrical structures are obtained in this way, for example, a straight line or a plane, which are characteristic of the body to be examined. The ultrasound head is now aligned in relation to these geometrical structures so that the central plane of the ultrasound head assumes a certain orientation relative to the geometrical structures, for example, extends perpendicularly to a straight line joining two prominent points or to a plane spanned by three prominent points. A defined orientation of the ultrasound head, which, at the most, differs from an ideal orientation by a few degrees owing to the imprecision of the prominent points is thereby ensured for the examination. At any rate, the margin for the orientation of the ultrasound head is in this way substantially limited in comparison with the margin allowed to a person carrying out the examination with conventional methods where no specifications exist for the orientation of the ultrasound head.
The invention also relates to an apparatus for examining a body, comprising an ultrasound head, in which a plurality of ultrasound emitters which are placed next to one another and emit ultrasonic radiation in a common central plane of the ultrasound head, and a plurality of ultrasound receivers are arranged in a row, a navigation system for determining the position of marker elements secured to the body, the ultrasound head and possibly further instruments, and a data processor which is fed the position data determined by the navigation system.
An object of the invention is to so design such an apparatus that improved reproducible ultrasound examination data are obtainable with it.
This object is accomplished, in accordance with the invention, in an apparatus of this kind in that the data processor is programmed so as to determine the orientation of the ultrasound head relative to the orientation of a geometrical structure of the body, which is defined by prominent points of the body, and the position data of which are stored in the data processor. The data processor thus calculates the orientation of the ultrasound head relative to the orientation of the geometrical structure, which has been determined by preliminary examinations, so that the user then has the possibility of orientating the ultrasound head relative to the geometrical structure as desired.
In particular, the data processor can be programmed so as to feed to a display device a signal which corresponds to a deviation in the orientation of the ultrasound head from the stored orientation of the geometrical structure. The user thus has the possibility of following on the display device the deviation of the orientation of the ultrasound head from the desired orientation, i.e., from a certain orientation relative to the orientation of the geometrical structure stored in the data processor.
The following description of preferred embodiments of the invention serves, in conjunction with the drawings, to provide a more detailed explanation.
The data obtained in this way are fed through a line 4 to a data processor 5 comprising inter alia a display device 6 in the form of a monitor. The transit times of the ultrasonic radiation are represented on this display device 6 in such a way that an image of the structure reflecting the ultrasonic radiation is thereby produced.
Rigidly attached to the ultrasound head 3 is a marker element 7 which is part of a navigation system. This navigation system includes inter alia three emitters 8, 9, 10 spaced from one another, which emit a radiation reflected at reflection elements 11, 12, 13, 14 of the marker element 7 and pick it up again. Use of three spatially separate emitters 8, 9, 10 allows the distance of the reflection elements 11, 12, 13, 14 from the emitters to be determined and hence the position and the orientation of the marker element 7 relative to the emitters 8, 9, 10, i.e., in a fixed coordinate system. Since the marker element 7 is secured to the ultrasound head 3, a precise determination of the location of the ultrasound head 3 in the fixed coordinate system is also obtained, i.e., the respective position and the orientation of the ultrasound head 3.
The position data of the ultrasound head 3 determined by the navigation system can also be fed to the data processor 5.
It is also possible to attach such a marker element 18 to the femur 17 of the patient 1, for example, using a bone screw or a band around the patient's thigh, thereby eliminating the need for invasive surgery. In this way, the position of the femur in the fixed coordinate system can be determined.
To examine the patient with an ultrasound head 3, the position of a selected geometrical structure in the body is first determined. The exemplary embodiment of
The selected location 22 in the area of the knee joint can, for example, be palpated through the skin using a palpation instrument 15. Alternatively, the position of the patella could be selected, it merely being essential that by determining two prominent points of the body, a geometrical structure of the body can be determined, in this case, a straight line 19, which joins these two prominent points and runs approximately along the femur 17.
The orientation of this straight line 19 relative to the femur 17 is stored in the memory of the data processor 5.
When examining the patient with the ultrasound head, the ultrasound head 3 is orientated in such a way that a certain orientation of the ultrasound head 3 relative to the stored geometrical structure is always assumed, for example, the ultrasound head 3 is always orientated in such a way that its central plane extends perpendicularly to the straight line 19, as shown in
Moreover, the position data of the selected points could also be determined in a different way, for example, with the ultrasound head 3 itself. The position of the body's structures is first determined, i.e., for example, the femur head and the condyles, in any orientation of the ultrasound head 3. On the basis of this rough determination, without any prescribed orientation of the ultrasound head 3, prominent points can be reasonably accurately determined and, therefore, on the basis of this determination, the orientation of the straight line 19 can also be defined. Since the accuracy is not of any great importance in this case, these points can also be obtained when the ultrasound head 3 is at an incline in relation to the straight line 19.
During the final examination, however, care is taken to ensure that the ultrasound head maintains the prescribed orientation in relation to the thus predetermined and stored straight line 19.
A similar procedure can be used when determining the position of the frontal plane of a pelvic bone 23 (
During the final ultrasound examination, the ultrasound head 3 is then orientated such that its central plane extends perpendicularly to this predetermined frontal plane 24. With this orientation, the prominent points, i.e., the iliac crests 25, 26 and the pubic bone 27, can be determined with increased precision, thereby enabling an exact determination of the frontal plane 24.
In many cases, an orientation of the ultrasound head, which extends perpendicularly to a plane or a straight line, for example, perpendicularly to the frontal plane, is favorable. There may, however, also be other cases where another orientation is favorable, for example, an orientation of 75° relative to the frontal. plane. This depends on the anatomical features. It is merely essential that it be made possible for the operator to align the ultrasound head in a defined manner relative to a certain geometrical structure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 023 218 | May 2008 | DE | national |