Daniel Claus, Marijo Mlikota, Jonathan Geibel, Thomas Reichenbach, Giancarlo Pedrini, Johannes Mischinger, Siegfried Schmauder, Wolfgang Osten
Journal of Medical Imaging, Vol. 4, Issue 01, 014505, (March 2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JMI.4.1.014505
TOPICS: Tissues, Elastography, Silicon, Digital image correlation, 3D modeling, Kidney, Biomedical optics, Tissue optics, Surgery, Particles
In minimally invasive surgery the haptic feedback, which represents an important tool for the localization of abnormalities, is no longer available. Elastography is an imaging technique that results in quantitative elastic parameters. It can hence be used to replace the lost sense of touch, as to enable tissue localization and discrimination. Digital image correlation is the chosen elastographic imaging technique. The implementation discussed here is clinically sound, based on a spectrally engineered illumination source that enables imaging of biological surface markers (blood vessels) with high contrast. Mechanical loading and deformation of the sample is performed using a rolling indenter, which enables the investigation of large organs (size of kidney) with reduced measurement time compared to a scanning approach. Furthermore, the rolling indentation results in strain contrast improvement and an increase in detection accuracy. The successful application of digital image correlation is first demonstrated on a silicone phantom and later on biological samples. Elasticity parameters and their corresponding four-dimensional distribution are generated via solving the inverse problem (only two-dimensional displacement field and strain map experimentally available) using a well-matched hyperelastic finite element model.