Skip to content
BY-NC-ND 4.0 license Open Access Published by De Gruyter September 7, 2017

Handling images of patient postures in arms up and arms down position using a biomechanical skeleton model

  • Hendrik Teske EMAIL logo , Kathrin Bartelheimer , Rolf Bendl , Eva M. Stoiber and Kristina Giske

Abstract

Deformable image registration is gradually becoming the tool of choice for motion extraction during adaptive radiotherapy. Achieving a motion vector field that accurately represents the anatomical changes requires a tissue specific transformation model. Therefore, widely used spline based models most likely fail in appropriately reproducing large anatomical changes such as the arms of the patient being positioned up and down. We present the application of a tissue specific biomechanical model with the goal to mimic patient motion even in presence of large motion. Based on the planning CT, delineated bones are used to represent the rigid anatomy of the patient. We implement ball-and-socket joints between corresponding bones in order to achieve mobility of the skeleton. An inverse kinematics approach enables the propagation of motion between individual bones across their joints, leading to an articulated skeleton that can be controlled by feature points on one or more bones. The transformation of each bone initializes a chainmail based soft tissue model to also propagate the motion into the surrounding heterogeneous soft tissue. Representation of different postures like arms up and down can be achieved within less than 1 s for the skeleton and ∼10 s for the soft tissue. Especially for large anatomical changes, the kinematics approach benefits from the direct articulation at specific joints, considerably lowering the degrees of freedom for motion description. Being the input for the chainmail based soft tissue model, the transformed bones guarantee for its meaningful initialization. The proposed biomechanical skeleton model is promising to facilitate the registration of patients’ anatomy, being positioned with arms up and arms down. The results encourage further refinement of the joints and the soft tissue model.

Published Online: 2017-09-07

©2017 Hendrik Teske et al., published by De Gruyter

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Downloaded on 28.3.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/cdbme-2017-0099/html
Scroll to top button