4.5 Article

A robust motion correction technique for infrared thermography during awake craniotomy

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11548-023-02953-8

Keywords

Infrared thermography; Image-guided neurosurgery; Image processing; Motion correction; Awake craniotomy; SSIM

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This study developed a fast and robust motion estimation and correction technique as a preprocessing step for brain surface thermography recordings. The technique approximates the deformation field associated with motion using a grid of two-dimensional bilinear splines and constrains motion to biomechanically feasible solutions. The proposed method performed well compared to other techniques tested.
PurposeIntraoperative infrared thermography is an emerging technique for image-guided neurosurgery, whereby physiological and pathological processes result in temperature changes over space and time. However, motion during data collection leads to downstream artifacts in thermography analyses. We develop a fast, robust technique for motion estimation and correction as a preprocessing step for brain surface thermography recordings.MethodsA motion correction technique for thermography was developed which approximates the deformation field associated with motion as a grid of two-dimensional bilinear splines (Bispline registration), and a regularization function was designed to constrain motion to biomechanically feasible solutions. The performance of the proposed Bispline registration technique was compared to phase correlation, a band-stop filter, demons registration, and the Horn-Schunck and Lucas-Kanade optical flow techniques.ResultsAll methods were analyzed using thermography data from ten patients undergoing awake craniotomy for brain tumor resection, and performance was compared using image quality metrics. The proposed method had the lowest mean-squared error and the highest peak-signal-to-noise ratio of all methods tested and performed slightly worse than phase correlation and Demons registration on the structural similarity index metric (p < 0.01, Wilcoxon signed-rank test). Band-stop filtering and the Lucas-Kanade method were not strong attenuators of motion, while the Horn-Schunck method was well-performing initially but weakened over time.ConclusionBispline registration had the most consistently strong performance out of all the techniques tested. It is relatively fast for a nonrigid motion correction technique, capable of processing ten frames per second, and could be a viable option for real-time use. Constraining the deformation cost function through regularization and interpolation appears sufficient for fast, monomodal motion correction of thermal data during awake craniotomy.

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