Intraoperative Image-based Multiview 2D/3D Registration for Image-Guided Orthopaedic Surgery: Incorporation of Fiducial-Based C-Arm Tracking and GPU-Acceleration PROJECT TITLE :Intraoperative Image-based Multiview 2D/3D Registration for Image-Guided Orthopaedic Surgery: Incorporation of Fiducial-Based C-Arm Tracking and GPU-AccelerationABSTRACT:Intraoperative patient registration may significantly affect the outcome of image-guided surgery (IGS). Image-based registration approaches have several advantages over the currently dominant point-based direct contact methods and are used in some industry solutions in image-guided radiation therapy with fixed X-ray gantries. However, technical challenges including geometric calibration and computational cost have precluded their use with mobile C-arms for IGS. We propose a 2D/3D registration framework for intraoperative patient registration using a conventional mobile X-ray imager combining fiducial-based C-arm tracking and graphics processing unit (GPU)-acceleration. The two-stage framework 1) acquires X-ray images and estimates relative pose between the images using a custom-made in-image fiducial, and 2) estimates the patient pose using intensity-based 2D/3D registration. Experimental validations using a publicly available gold standard dataset, a plastic bone phantom and cadaveric specimens have been conducted. The mean target registration error (mTRE) was $0.34pm 0.04~{hbox {mm}}$ (success rate: 100%, registration time: 14.2 s) for the phantom with two images 90$^circ$ apart, and $0.99pm 0.41~{hbox {mm}}$ (81%, 16.3 s) for the cadaveric specimen with images 58.5$^circ$ apart. The experimental results showed the feasibility of the proposed registration framework as a practical alternative for IGS routines. Did you like this research project? To get this research project Guidelines, Training and Code... Click Here facebook twitter google+ linkedin stumble pinterest RF Field Visualization of RF Ablation at the Larmor Frequency A System for Video-Based Navigation for Endoscopic Endonasal Skull Base Surgery