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Chen, X; Xu, L; Wang, Y; Wang, H; Wang, F; Zeng, X; Wang, Q; Egger, J.
Development of a surgical navigation system based on augmented reality using an optical see-through head-mounted display.
J Biomed Inform. 2015; 55(2): 124-131. Doi: 10.1016/j.jbi.2015.04.003 [OPEN ACCESS]
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Co-authors Med Uni Graz
Egger Jan
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Abstract:
The surgical navigation system has experienced tremendous development over the past decades for minimizing the risks and improving the precision of the surgery. Nowadays, Augmented Reality (AR)-based surgical navigation is a promising technology for clinical applications. In the AR system, virtual and actual reality are mixed, offering real-time, high-quality visualization of an extensive variety of information to the users (Moussa et al., 2012) [1]. For example, virtual anatomical structures such as soft tissues, blood vessels and nerves can be integrated with the real-world scenario in real time. In this study, an AR-based surgical navigation system (AR-SNS) is developed using an optical see-through HMD (head-mounted display), aiming at improving the safety and reliability of the surgery. With the use of this system, including the calibration of instruments, registration, and the calibration of HMD, the 3D virtual critical anatomical structures in the head-mounted display are aligned with the actual structures of patient in real-world scenario during the intra-operative motion tracking process. The accuracy verification experiment demonstrated that the mean distance and angular errors were respectively 0.809±0.05mm and 1.038°±0.05°, which was sufficient to meet the clinical requirements. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Computer Graphics - instrumentation
Equipment Design -
Equipment Failure Analysis -
Head -
Head Protective Devices -
Humans -
Image Enhancement - instrumentation
Imaging, Three-Dimensional - instrumentation
Reproducibility of Results -
Sensitivity and Specificity -
Surgery, Computer-Assisted - instrumentation
User-Computer Interface -

Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
Surgical navigation
Augmented reality
Optical see-through HMD
Intra-operative motion tracking
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