1. Field of the Invention
The present invention concerns a method and device to generate a complete image of an inner surface of a body cavity, the complete image being composed of a number of individual endoscopic images, using an endoscope introduced into the body cavity.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In an endoscopic examination of a body cavity of a patient, the examining physician strives to acquire the inner surface of the body cavity as completely as possible in order to avoid false-negative diagnoses (incorrect diagnoses that result in no finding) due to unacquired wall regions. However, such a complete acquisition of the inner surface of the body cavity represents a significant problem for the examining physician due to the limited image field of an endoscope and the lack of spatial depth in the presentation of the endoscopy image on a monitor, such that the risk exists that pathological regions are undetected. Although lenses known as fisheye objectives with large aperture angles up to 180° are available for image acquisition, their imaging quality is not satisfactory and the images acquired with such a fisheye objective are difficult for an observer to understand.
In order to enable optimally significant image information of the inner surface of the body cavity, it is known (for example from DE 10 2004 008 164 B3) to combine a number of individual endoscopic images acquired and stored from different positions and orientations of an endoscope into a complete image and to generate a virtual 3D model of the inner surface of the body cavities with the aid of a distance measurement system (likewise integrated into the endoscope).
A computer-assisted 3D imaging method for a wireless endoscopy apparatus (endoscopy capsule) equipped with a video camera is known from DE 103 18 205 A1. In this method the individual endoscopic images transferred to an acquisition and evaluation device are subjected to a pattern recognition algorithm in order to detect overlapping structures. In this known method the individual images are also then combined into a complete image and a 3D model.
In the known methods it is not ensured that the individual images generated with the endoscope and stored for further image processing can be combined into a gapless complete image.
An object of the invention is to provide a method for generation of a complete image composed from a number of individual endoscopic images of the inner surface of a body cavity of a patient, with which is ensured that at least one sub-region of the inner surface is completely covered by the complete image, i.e. without gaps in the complete image. A further object of the invention is to provide a device operating according to such a method.
With regard to the method, the above object is achieved according to the invention by a method for generation of a complete image composed of a number of individual endoscopic images of the inner surface of a body cavity of a patient, wherein an optical axis of the endoscope is controlled by evaluation and comparison of the individual images acquired from different directions.
The method according to the invention ensures that the individual images are stored and available for composition of the complete image so as to gaplessly (i.e. completely) cover at least one diagnostically relevant region of the inner surface that is larger than a region acquired with an individual image.
The term “optical axis of the endoscope” is to be understood in the following as the optical axis of the imaging system utilized for endoscopic image generation in object space. This imaging system can be a video camera integrated into the endoscope tip, for example.
In an embodiment of the method, in a first step a number of individual images are acquired from predetermined different directions and stored. Any gap that occurs between adjacent individual images as well as directions respectively associated with such gaps are identified. Using these directions, an individual image is generated anew in a second step by controlling the alignment of the optical axis of the endoscope by evaluation and comparison of the individual images. The second step is repeated as often as needed until the complete image composed from the individual images no longer contains gaps.
The aforementioned number of individual images can be two successive individual images or series of successive individual images.
The alignment of the optical axis of the endoscope advantageously ensues automatically, i.e. without an intervention by the physician conducting the examination being necessary for this. As an alternative or in addition, it is possible that an optical, audio or haptic indicator is provided to the physician indicating whether, given manual control and manual image triggering, the physician has generated successive individual images with sufficient overlap for generation of a complete image formed without gaps.
The alignment of the optical axis of the endoscope can ensue by alignment of the tip of the endoscope.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, an endoscope with a video camera, that is mounted such that it can be panned in the endoscope tip, is used to align the optical axis by such panning.
The location of the endoscope and the direction of the optical axis can additionally detected in a fixed coordinate system and stored together with the individual image determined at this location and with this direction, making it possible to link the individual endoscopic images or the complete endoscopic image with images from other imaging methods implemented during or immediately before or after the endoscopic examination.
Moreover, the distance of the endoscope tip from the inner surface of the cavity in the direction of the optical axis can be measured and stored for each individual image, and a complete 3D image is generated from the individual images and the respective associated distance. The position and the direction, a particularly intuitive representation of the body cavity, is then available for the examining physician.
The object according to the invention also is achieved by a device operating according to the above method exhibiting advantages that correspond to the advantages described with regard to the method.
According to
Deviating from the presentation of
Given use of a flexible endoscope 4 as shown in the
As an alternative, given a flexible endoscope 4 control of the video camera 6 ensues externally from the endoscope 4, for example with the use of an external magnetic field.
Moreover, a distance measurement device 10 with which it is possible to measure the distance a of the endoscope tip 4 or of the iris of the video camera 6 from the inner surface 12 of the body cavity 2 in the direction of the optical axis 8 is integrated into the endoscope tip 4. In the case of a video camera 6 arranged such that it can pan inside the endoscope 4, the distance measurement device 10 is mechanically forcibly coupled with this. Moreover, a position sensor 14 with which the position and alignment of the endoscopy tip can be detected in a fixed coordinate system x, y, z is integrated into the endoscope 4. The direction φ, θ of the optical axis 8 of the video camera 6 is also known in this fixed coordinate system x, y, z. Moreover, the solid angle acquired by the video camera 6 is plotted in the Figure with Ω.
With the aid of the video camera 6, a sub-region of the inner surface 12 is respectively rendered for different directions of the optical axis 8, and partially overlapping individual images E are generated and relayed to a control and evaluation device 20 that analyzes the individual images E (existing in digital form) and combines them into a contiguous complete image B that is rendered on a monitor 22. In order to ensure that the generated image data set B delivers a gapless complete image B of at least one section of the inner surface 12 of the body cavity, adjacent individual images are evaluated in the control and evaluation device 20 as to whether they exhibit correlating image features and overlap. In order to ensure such an overlap, control signals S with which the alignment of the optical axis 8 of the endoscope 4 is automatically controlled are generated on the basis of the result of this evaluation determined in the control and evaluation device 20. A complete image B rendering at least one region of the inner surface 12 of the body cavity 2 can be generated in this manner, which complete image B displays a surface area that is significantly larger than the field of view or image field of an individual image E and, in the ideal case, shows a complete or nearly complete 360° panoramic view of the body cavity 2.
A 3D complete image B of the inner surface 12 of the body cavity 2 can also be generated via evaluation of the distance a belonging to each individual image E acquired in the direction φ, θ and the position of the intersection point of the optical axis 8 with the inner surface 12 of the body cavity 2 that is known from this. This 3D complete image B can be inserted into a 3D data set D generated with another imaging method so that the endoscopic diagnoses can be combined with other diagnostic methods and the diagnosis reliability can be increased.
A possible workflow of the algorithm to control the alignment of the optical axis of the endoscope is exemplarily illustrated in the flow diagram according to
The example shown in
As an alternative to such an automatic control, it is also possible for the operator to manually effect the alignment of the optical axis in that he manually stores individual images, wherein after the storage of an individual image following a preceding stored individual image it is indicated to him via corresponding indicator signals that the panning movement implemented by him for the subsequent individual image was too large to enable an overlap of the individual images. The operator then receives, by acoustic, optical or haptic signals, the prompt to pan the video camera back until a corresponding overlap is established.
Although modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the art, it is the intention of the inventors to embody within the patent warranted hereon all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of their contribution to the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 029 884.8 | Jun 2007 | DE | national |