The present invention relates to endoscopic diagnosis.
The present invention is based on two fundamental premises: i) effectively curing malignancy such as cancer depends early detection, which has two elements: sufficient image resolution to identify small lesions and tumors, and sufficient and reliable viewing coverage to ensure there are no diagnostic blind spots; and ii) because viewing is limited, current endoscopic diagnostic procedures can be time consuming and require substantial training. For example, the main challenge in cystoscopic screening of bladder cancer is ensuring that the diagnosis reliably covers the entire interior bladder surface.
Being able to obtain high-resolution wide-angle endoscopic maps would be useful in diagnosis, surgical planning, surgical intervention, and post-surgical diagnosis for verifying tumor removal. Particular utility would be in cystoscopic cancer screening, hysteroscopic diagnosis of the interior surface of the uterus (National Institute of Health Grant No. 1R43CA097824-01), imaging of the nose and throat cavities, and neuroendoscopy of the brain's ventricular system where it is very easy to get disoriented and where it is important to minimize gross instrument motion. Further applications include arthroscopy for imaging of joint cavities, and endoscopic inspection of the thorax.
Current technology is limited in its ability to provide both high resolution and wide reliable viewing coverage in a single system. Noninvasive imaging techniques such as X-ray, MRI, CT, ultrasound, and their derivative virtual endoscopy, have unlimited viewing directionality and the positioning accuracy necessary for building complete diagnostic maps of the anatomy, but their imaging resolution is an order of magnitude less than that of endoscopy. Currently these methods are only able to resolve mature tumors several millimeters in diameter, and improving this resolution is still going to require prolonged scientific development. It is also unlikely that these techniques will ever be able to identify tissue color, which is important in diagnosis.
Conversely, endoscopic imaging has excellent optical resolution and color information but is plagued by inconsistencies in viewing coverage. The endoscopic viewing process is hampered by a limited field of view and is mechanically constrained by the endoscope insertion port and interior anatomy. It is further complicated by the fact that the endoscope provides no natural sense of orientation, and it is common for an operator to get lost or disoriented while using endoscopes. Getting reliable diagnoses with endoscopes is therefore operator dependent, and there is great variability in the skill levels of endoscopists. Obtaining a structured sense of the surroundings requires the endoscopist to cover all areas of an inspection site and to keep a mental record of the relative endoscopic viewing positions. It also requires that the endoscopist distinguish between regions already covered and regions not yet inspected (much like to trying to ensure complete coverage when vacuuming the floor). These tasks require great technical skill, spatial awareness, and memory and are so challenging that endoscopic diagnoses often leave missed areas.
One of the underlying problems here is that endoscopic diagnosis is generally a free-hand technique. Whether the diagnosis is being performed with a fixed-angle endoscope, a flexible variable direction of view scope (U.S. Pat. No. 3,880,148 to Kanehira, U.S. Pat. No. 5,257,618 to Kondo), or a rigid variable direction of view scope (U.S. Pat. No. 3,856,000 to Chikama, U.S. Pat. No. 4,697,577 to Forkner, U.S. Pat. No. 6,371,909 to Høeg et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,364,830 to Durell, U.S. Pat. No. 6,500,115 to Krattiger et al.), or a hybrid scope, (the LTF TYPE V3 Olympus Laparo-Thoraco Videoendoscope in which the main shaft is rigid but the tip portion can be flexed), it is subject to the inconsistencies of manual endoscope manipulation with no means for doing accurate position registration between views. The VOCAL (Video Optical Comparison and Logging) software package somewhat improves this situation by recording running video of endoscopic procedures and integrating sequential frames into composite images. This provides the user with a broader diagnostic overview but does not address the problem of discontinuous coverage and missed areas and also does not yield accurate information about the relative location of viewed areas.
Other attempts to minimize diagnostic inconsistencies are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,313,306 to Kuban et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,449,103 to Charles, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,800,341 to McKenna et al. These designs propose to capture panoramic or omniramic imaging information in a single large frame and avoid the problem of having to mentally patch together disjoint view fields. While good in concept, these designs can not currently provide sufficient resolution and illumination and have apparently never been reduced to practice.
Accordingly, the current invention provides a method for capturing composite endoscopic images. This method will improve endoscopic diagnosis by providing accurate high-resolution low-distortion wide-angle visual coverage; obtaining panoramic and omniramic information by automated capture; building and displaying composite images of the endoscopic space with minimal blind spots; minimizing user disorientation; and reducing procedure time. Other advantages will become apparent from the following.
In accordance with the present invention, a method is provided for capturing and displaying endoscopic maps.
The following detailed description illustrates the invention by way of example, not by way of limitation of the principles of the invention. This description will clearly enable one skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and describes several embodiments, adaptations, variations, alternatives and uses of the invention, including what we presently believe is the best mode of carrying out the invention.
An endoscope map will be defined as a composite or compound image created from more than one individual frame. Such a composite image can be a set of individual frames such as a mosaic or a single contiguous integrated field synthesized from individual frames.
Referring now to the drawings, in which like reference numbers represent similar or identical structures throughout,
U.S. Pat. No. 6,663,559 to Hale et al. discusses an endoscope control interface which enables electronic position control of a variable direction of endoscope. With this interface, or other electromechanical position control, relative registration between endoscopic views is possible, and the endoscopic view vector 12 can be programmed to follow preset viewing sequences or trajectories. A scan trajectory will be defined as the locus of the center of the endoscopic view frame 30. Each view frame 30, or set of frames, captured along a trajectory is identified by a set of endoscope configuration coordinates representing the states of the three degrees of freedom. These coordinates are stored in a frame-indexing array which correlates visual information with viewing position.
Systematic scan trajectories make it possible to cover a spherical solid angle 36, as shown in
A related way to provide reliable visual coverage scheme is to capture only as many frames as necessary to cover a globe. Rather than executing a continuous scanning motion the mechanism could systematically move to discrete positions and capture a frame in each position. To provide reliable coverage with no gaps, it is necessary to consider the geometry of the view frame 30. Videoendoscopes (endoscopes which have an image sensor at the tip) may have square or rectangular view fields depending on the objective lens arrangement. Squares and rectangles can be systematically tiled to ensure contiguous coverage, and there should be no relative rotation between frames. Most endoscopes however have a circular view field 33, in which case radial symmetry makes field orientation irrelevant. For contiguous coverage with a circular view field, the ideal arrangement of neighboring frames is shown in
The system described in Hale et al. can combine individual degrees of freedom to generate smooth off-axis view vector movements 42 that are not aligned with the natural frame 44 of the endoscope 10, as shown in
Examples of specific applications for the method of the present invention are given in
The simplest way to communicate the captured imaging information to a reviewer is to play back the captured video stream from a continuous helical scan. The reviewer then simply watches the movie and looks for lesions or other tissue abnormalities. This is the current method for reviewing imaging data captured from a gastrointestinal capsule endoscope such as those commercially available from Given Imaging.
Another way to communicate the imaging information is to display portions of the videostream as still image strips 57 which together provide complete visual coverage of the examined area, as shown in
It is also possible to integrate the frames 30 into a contiguous map by stitching them together electronically. There are a number of commercially available pixel filtering and averaging algorithms for generating seamless composites, for example the VOCAL package mentioned above, or the VideoFOCUS software which processes sequential video frames in order to produce a single high-quality image. In presenting an assembled map to the user, a number of different mapping formats can be used. Which cartographic projection scheme to use depends on the type of information the map is intended to accentuate. Conformal mappings preserve local angles in the projection. This type of map is good for local view vector movements. Equal area mappings map areas on a sphere or other appropriate object to equal or scaled areas in the plane. This type of map is good for comparing sizes of lesions or tumors on different areas of the map. Equidistant mappings preserve or scale distances. Such mappings are useful for showing optimal paths between points.
During a diagnosis or surgical procedure, a user may move through a random trajectory 42, where each successive view 30 is positioned and oriented according to running need, as shown in
The method of the present invention also applies to endoscopes which do not have a variable direction of view. Depending on the particular anatomy and the endoscopic field of view, most any endoscope can provide wide systematic coverage if controlled appropriately. As shown in
It is also possible to build endoscopic maps by manually controlling an image guided endoscope 10 with a fixed viewing direction, as shown in
A graphical user interface 88 for the endoscopic mapping system of the present invention is shown in
The present invention has been described above in terms of a presently preferred embodiment so that an understanding of the present invention can be conveyed. However, there are many variations not specifically described herein but with which the present invention is applicable. For example, while the examples were given with respect to an endoscope for use in surgical procedures, the present invention would be equally applicable with respect to a borescope for use within various mechanical structures. Also, there are many different endoscopic scan patterns which could be used to produce omniramas, and these patterns might vary with application. The scope of the present invention should therefore not be limited by the embodiments illustrated, but rather it should be understood that the present invention has wide applicability with respect to viewing instruments and procedures generally. All modifications, variations, or equivalent elements and implementations that are within the scope of the appended claims should therefore be considered within the scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/464,085 filed Apr. 21, 2003, entitled “Methods for capturing, building, and displaying endoscopic maps,” the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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