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Alignment of the Patient Graphic Model Using Fluoroscopic Images for Skin Dose Mapping

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A Oines

A Oines*, A Oines , J Kilian-Meneghin , B Karthikeyan , S Rudin , D Bednarek , University at Buffalo (SUNY) School of Med., Buffalo, NY

Presentations

TU-D-209-3 (Tuesday, August 2, 2016) 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM Room: 209


Purpose:The Dose Tracking System (DTS) was developed to provide real-time feedback of skin dose and dose rate during interventional fluoroscopic procedures. A color map on a 3D graphic of the patient represents the cumulative dose distribution on the skin. Automated image correlation algorithms are described which use the fluoroscopic procedure images to align and scale the patient graphic for more accurate dose mapping.

Methods:Currently, the DTS employs manual patient graphic selection and alignment. To improve the accuracy of dose mapping and automate the software, various methods are explored to extract information about the beam location and patient morphology from the procedure images. To match patient anatomy with a reference projection image, preprocessing is first used, including edge enhancement, edge detection, and contour detection. Template matching algorithms from OpenCV are then employed to find the location of the beam. Once a match is found, the reference graphic is scaled and rotated to fit the patient, using image registration correlation functions in Matlab. The algorithm runs correlation functions for all points and maps all correlation confidences to a surface map. The highest point of correlation is used for alignment and scaling. The transformation data is saved for later model scaling.

Results:Anatomic recognition is used to find matching features between model and image and image registration correlation provides for alignment and scaling at any rotation angle with less than one-second runtime, and at noise levels in excess of 150% of those found in normal procedures.

Conclusion:The algorithm provides the necessary scaling and alignment tools to improve the accuracy of dose distribution mapping on the patient graphic with the DTS.

Funding Support, Disclosures, and Conflict of Interest: Partial support from NIH Grant R01-EB002873 and Toshiba Medical Systems Corp.


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