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| United States Patent | 6120465 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/6120465.html |
| Inventor(s) | Guthrie; Barton L. (Birmingham, AL), Daniels; Robert A. (Haverhill, MA) |
| Abstract | This invention relates to a three-dimensional digitizer and a probe means
associated with said digitizer that enables a virtual target point to be
visualized and depth and range measurements to that target to be
determined. In one embodiment, a mechanical articulated arm or other type
of 3-D digitizer is used in conjunction with a graphics workstation which
displays images from CT, MR, or other scanning means of the anatomy. By
registration of the digitizer to the patient's physical anatomy, a
representation of the digitizer on the display means of the graphics
workstation is possible. The position of the digitizer will be displayed
in its quantitative relationship to the patient's anatomy, including
internal pathologies such as tumors. The end means of the 3-D digitizer
could be a holder or fixation device which can accept a sliding probe. The
probe, for example, could be a shaft which slides in a spring-loaded or
non-spring-loaded fashion within the fixation means of the digitizer. The
degree of extension of the probe from the fixation means can be read out
by a scale, which might be engraved on the shaft of the sliding probe. The
digitizer, when calibrated to the anatomy, would register a target point
and also a direction of the probe as it would approach that point, as seen
on the graphics workstation. There may be a pre-determined relationship of
the virtual tip of a probe relative to the fixation means as it scans the
anatomy with the probe moving in space. The physical probe might be the
sliding rod, which will be retractile within the fixation means. Thus, by
knowing the degree of retraction, one can gauge the distance from the tip
of the sliding probe to the virtual target, as calculated in the 3-D
graphic workstation. |
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Title Information  |
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| Publication Date |
September 19, 2000 |
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| Filing Date |
April 24, 1997 |
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| Parent Case |
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/521,908 filed
on Aug. 31, 1995 abandoned which is a continuation of Ser. No. 08/185,716
filed Jan. 24, 1994 abandoned. |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART
The use of stereotactic frames and three-dimensional digitizers in so-called "frameless" stereotaxy is now well known and described in the literature. In the case of frame-based stereotaxy, typically a head ring is placed on the patient, usually
his head, and an arc system is further attached to the head ring so as to direct a probe into the body quantitatively to achieve an internal target, such as a tumor. In a case of frameless stereotaxy, several types of three-dimensional digitizers,
including mechanically articulated arms, optically coupled probes, electromagnetic coupling devices, ultrasonic and acoustic devices have been devised which give the operator a frameless and freehand means of identifying a target within the physical
anatomy by relating the position of a navigator to a graphic representation of that anatomy derived from scanner image data. For example, a CT X-ray scan of the patient's head may be done, and a set of two-dimensional scan slices may be collected and
inputted into a computer graphic workstation. The workstation can then assemble these 2-D slices and render the anatomy in a three-dimensional representation, shown on the display means of the computer workstation, such as a cathode ray tube (CRT). By
identifying at least three non-colinear points on the physical anatomy, as relates to the 3-D representation in the computer graphic workstation, one can register the entire data set in the computer workstation relative to the actual anatomy. By using a
digitizer or navigator which has an encoding means to give position data of a navigator in real space back to the computer graphic workstation, and by touching a known point on a navigator to the three non-colinear points on the physical anatomy in a
calibration maneuver, the digitizer may be calibrated relative to the anatomy and its position can be displayed on the computer graphic workstation display means as a virtual indication of the position and orientation of the digitizer. This is a
standard technique in the field of so-called frameless stereotaxy.
There are several types of digitizers which can be used for this purpose, and they range from mechanically encoded arms, optically coupled devices, electromagnetically coupled devices, ultrasonically coupled devices, and other technologies. To
this date, theses digitizers involved a probe or instrument means which is attached to the digitizer, so that when the probe tip is pointed to physical anatomy, the position of the tip on the three-dimensional graphics of the anatomy in the computer
workstation can be represented. Various instrument holders can be applied to the digitizer to hold probes, suction tubes, forceps, and other instruments, and they may have a known calibrated length so as so make the mapping between physical and graphic
space.
One of the objects of this invention is to enable the operator to use the digitizer to point at an internal target in the physical anatomy without having to attach a rigid or fixed probe means to the digitizer, so as to give a virtual
presentation of where the digitizer would be pointing in the physical anatomy along a given probe line, without actually physically reaching that internal target point. It is notable that if one has a fixed probe of pre-determined or calibrated length
in the digitizer, and that probe is pointing along a line projected through a target, it is not immediately obvious by mechanical means what the distance between the probe tip and the desired anatomical target is. The probe tip may be placed, for
example, on the external anatomy such as the scalp, pointing in the direction towards an internal target such as a tumor, and it would be desirable to know by an immediate physical observation what the distance from the scalp to the tumor is along the
projected line of the probe. This could be calculated or visualized on the computer graphic workstation, but a physical visualization on the digitizer or probe means would be desirable. It is an object of the present invention to provide such
mechanical means on the digitizer probe means.
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
FIG. 1 shows an embodiment of the present invention which includes a virtual sliding probe means on a digitizer with 3-D graphic workstation cooperatively coupled to the digitizer.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 shows one embodiment of the present invention. A digitizer, represented by a mechanically encoded arm 1 is connected by electronic means 7 to a computer graphic workstation 10. The digitizing arm has lengths of known values and encoded
joints, so that the position of probe adaptor 2 can be tracked relative to a base or holding structure 22 and the movement of probe holder 2 relative to 22 can therefore be tracked in three-dimensional space. The interface electronic 7 is designed to
assimilate the electronic encoder data from the digitizer 1 and enable it to be represented in the computer graphic workstation 10. In the probe holder 2 is a probe means 4, such as a solid rod or pointer. Its tip 8 may be touching the external anatomy
of a patient 5, and the projection of the axis of the probe 3 may pass through an internal anatomical point 6, which is at a distance (D) away from tip 8. The representation of the patient's anatomy may be displayed by FIG. 55 by assimilating image scan
data and representing it as described above in a two-dimensional or three-dimensional display. The target point may be determined in this three-dimensional display and represented as points 56 on the display. If the digitizer 1 has built into its
predetermined calculation a standardized length of probe means to be inserted into the tip end 33 of the probe adaptor 2, then the tip of the predetermined-length probe may be represented by point 16 on a graphic rendering of the probe means 57 on the
display means. In many cases of application of this type of digitizer, however, it is desirable to plan the position and orientation of the digitizer applicator 2 relative to the patient's anatomy 5 and an internal target 6 prior to actually making an
incision in the patient's scalp at point 8. In this situation, the standard probe length would be unacceptable in some situations to orient the adaptor 2, since, if it were in place in the adaptor 2, it would achieve the anatomical target 6. It would
have to actually penetrate through the external anatomy and into the interior of the body. Of course, the adaptor means 2, with no probe inserted, could be moved around freehand and in space, and thus the position tracked on a computer graphic
workstation, so as to give an appreciation of a direction towards the target and, as displayed on the computer graphic workstation, a sense of the physical distance between point 16 and 18 on the computer rendering, which would be, for example, the depth
from the external anatomy to the target point 56 along the projected line 3.
As described in FIG. 1, it is possible to insert a probe means into adaptor 2, so as to indicate mechanically the direction of the digitizer axis 3 and to indicate the point of contact of direction 3 to the external anatomy at point 8, and yet
not require that the probe have a fixed calibrated length which would correspond to achieving the internal target 6. Instead, as shown in FIG. 1, the probe 4 can be a movable, sliding means, such as a rod which slides within a channel or opening in
adaptor 2. The rod may either be a free-sliding rod or it can be biased by an internal spring 30, which is inside of adaptor 2 and enables a restoring
force or spring-loaded bias on probe 4. In this way, as adaptor 2 is advanced or withdrawn in distance from point 8 at the external anatomy, the sliding probe 4 would extend or withdraw inside of guide adaptor 2. The probe 4 might be of a
predetermined length, such that when it is at an initial position within adaptor 2, its length corresponds to a predetermined length associated with the digitizer calibration. As the sliding probe 4 withdraws further into adaptor 2, there may be a
readout scale means 31 associated or cooperatively coupled to the rod that gives the rod's relative position or differential movement relative to adaptor 2. In this way, the distance (D) from the anatomical target (6), which corresponds to the virtual
endpoint of the pre-calibrated probe length, to the external contact point 8 could be read out by the extension distance, or scale reading, of a portion 32 of the sliding means. Thereby, the operator can visually see, on a mechanical adaption to the
digitizer, the scale reading 31 which is the distance (D) from the external anatomy to a target within a depth of the patient's body. This same distance (D) might also correspond to the associated visualized projection distance between the virtual probe
tip graphic 16 and the graphic representation of the external anatomy point 18.
Thus, by freehand movement of the digitizer 1 with the sliding probe 4 as one moves the digitizer in space relative to the anatomy 5, having the sliding probe 4 contact the external anatomy, the operator, without having to visualize the computer
graphic workstation, could simply read out scale 31 and have an immediate sense of the depth of the virtual probe tip (for the standardized probe length) relative to the external contact point 8.
The scale or readout means 31 could be at various locations or in various forms, as associated with the adaptor 2. FIG. 1 shows a simple scale 31 on the tail end of a probe. The scale would be at the patient proximal end 4 of the probe. The
scale might read the degree of extension (D) directly or it could indicate the length of extension of the probe proximally or directly the distance from a reference point on adaptor 2 to the physical probe tip at surface contact 8. The distance or scale
measurements could be represented electronically by a digital translation readout or it could be a side carrier with millimeter scale and not directly engraved onto the probe shaft itself. The invention is intended to include all such variations of a
mechanically or electromechanically derived scale reading on a sliding probe relative to the adaptor means 2 on a digitizer.
The sliding probe means could have a variety of forms, shapes, or adaptations. It might be spring-loaded, as indicated in FIG. 2 or it could be simply a friction or sliding fit through a guide channel or groove in adaptor 2. It may be an
instrument such as a suction tube, coagulating tube, or merely a rod means as a measuring device. The scale means could be adapted to any of these applications.
One of the utilities of this type of device is that by freehand or frameless movement of the digitizer wand and its adaptor 2 in space, one gets an immediate appreciation as the probe direction 3 changes of the relative distance of the tip of
proximal element 4 of the probe to a virtual target 6 within the anatomy. There might be other holder means in space which probe 4 slides into that could freeze the orientation of probe line 3 as a point to the anatomy 6. Once the appropriate
orientation has been positioned as seen by the representation of the probe 57 on the graphics, the guide means (not shown in FIG. 1) can be locked in place, the distance (D) observed from the scale 31, and the digitizer with the probe removed from the
holder means to a rest position. Thereby the holder means can be used pass other instruments into the body, and knowledge of the displacement from the external anatomy 8 to the target 6 will have been mechanically determined by said reading on the scale
31.
There are many variations of the embodiment shown in FIG. 1 which are intended to be included within this invention. The schematized three-dimensional digitizer 1 is shown as a mechanical arm, but it could involve position and orientation
detection means which span a wide range of physical principles. Optical, ultrasonic, electromagnetic, and other coupling means are possible to be substituted for a mechanically coupled arm. The adaptor means 2 could take many shapes and forms,
including holes within blocks, v-grooves, channels of various types, and the slider probe 4 could also take a variety of shapes, including simple cylindrical rods, bars, tools in elongated shapes, such as electrocautery or suction devices, endoscopes,
etc. The computer graphic workstation represented by 10 is shown schematically as a cathode ray tube structure, but it could have liquid crystal display and be in other forms associated with modern computer technology. The method of use of this
invention could also take various forms. The probe holder 2 with slider probe 4 could be, in a freehand and fluid way, moved around in the location of the patient's anatomy of interest while the operator reviews the relationship of the probe in graphic
form 57 relative to the anatomy 55 on the computer graphic workstation 10. The virtual probe tip 16 can be moved in a real time and interactive fashion within the anatomy while the slider probe tip 8 is contacting continuously the external surface of
the body. When an optimal orientation of the graphic rendering of the probe 57 is seen, the operator could observe the scale reading 31 and have an instantaneous perception of the depth and the orientation of the probe direction 3. This would provide a
convenient way of marking the surface point or entry point for an optimal probe direction, represented by point 8. At that point, the entire three-dimensional digitizer could be removed from the field, and a surgical intervention could be conducted
based on that entry point. The knowledge of the scale reading 31 could then provide knowledge of the depth (D) from the entry point 8 to the actual target location 6, which is represented by the virtual probe tip 16 corresponding to the target 56 on the
graphic display means of the computer graphic graphic workstation 10. All this could be done in real time and interactively. Various display means on the computer graphic workstation could be provided, including orthogonal sectional views through the
anatomy, probe's eye view and the plane-of-probe view, various other reconstructive planes, and the forms of the image data could be various. CT, MRI, ultrasound, PET, SPECT: all could be forms of scanning which could be rendered simultaneously or
individually on the computer display.
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