Purpose: To support surface registration in cranial radiation therapy by structural information. The risk for spatial ambiguities is minimized by using tissue thickness variations predicted from backscattered near-infrared (NIR) light from the forehead.

Methods And Materials: In a pilot study we recorded NIR surface scans by laser triangulation from 30 volunteers of different skin type. A ground truth for the soft-tissue thickness was segmented from MR scans. After initially matching the NIR scans to the MR reference, Gaussian processes were trained to predict tissue thicknesses from NIR backscatter. Moreover, motion starting from this initial registration was simulated by 5000 random transformations of the NIR scan away from the MR reference. Re-registration to the MR scan was compared with and without tissue thickness support.

Results: By adding prior knowledge to the backscatter features, such as incident angle and neighborhood information in the scanning grid, we showed that tissue thickness can be predicted with mean errors of <0.2 mm, irrespective of the skin type. With this additional information, the average registration error improved from 3.4 mm to 0.48 mm by a factor of 7. Misalignments of more than 1 mm were almost thoroughly (98.9%) pushed below 1 mm.

Conclusions: For almost all cases tissue-enhanced matching achieved better results than purely spatial registration. Ambiguities can be minimized if the cutaneous structures do not agree. This valuable support for surface registration increases tracking robustness and avoids misalignment of tumor targets far from the registration site.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2016.01.041DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tissue thickness
12
cranial radiation
8
radiation therapy
8
surface registration
8
nir
5
enhanced optical
4
optical head
4
head tracking
4
tracking cranial
4
therapy supporting
4

Similar Publications

The rare gastrointestinal tract epithelial polyp known as a pyloric gland adenoma (PGA) is more common in elderly women and uncommon in the duodenum. There are reports of two PGA cases involving high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia. A 75-year-old man was admitted to the hospital as Patient 1 due to "epigastric distension and pain for more than 10 days".

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Photon counting detectors offer promising advancements in computed tomography (CT) imaging by enabling the quantification and three-dimensional imaging of contrast agents and tissue types through simultaneous multi-energy projections from broad X-ray spectra. However, the accuracy of these decomposition methods hinges on precise composite spectral attenuation values that one must reconstruct from spectral micro-CT. Errors in such estimations could be due to effects such as beam hardening, object scatter, or detector sensor-related spectral distortions such as fluorescence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background/aim: Cesarean section (CS) is a widely performed operation worldwide but data about uterine closure are lacking. We aimed to evaluate scar niches and compare single-layer and double-layer uterine closure at 6 months following CS.

Materials And Methods: This prospective randomized trial assessed 56 women undergoing single- or double-layer uterine closure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protective effect of sub-hypothermic mechanical perfusion combined with membrane lung oxygenation on a yorkshire model of brain injury after traumatic blood loss.

Chin J Traumatol

December 2024

Beijing Key Lab of Regenerative Medicine in Orthopedics, Key Laboratory of Musculoskeletal Trauma and War Injuries PLA, Department of Orthopedics, The Fourth Medical Center, Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing, 100048, China. Electronic address:

Purpose: To investigate the protective effect of sub-hypothermic mechanical perfusion combined with membrane lung oxygenation on ischemic hypoxic injury of yorkshire brain tissue caused by traumatic blood loss.

Methods: This article performed a random controlled trial. Brain tissue of 7 yorkshire was selected and divided into the sub-low temperature anterograde machine perfusion group (n = 4) and the blank control group (n = 3) using the random number table method.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Analyzing the effect of surgical and corneal parameters on the postoperative refractive outcomes of SMILE in myopic eyes based on machine learning.

Am J Ophthalmol

December 2024

Clinical College of Ophthalmology, Tianjin Medical University, Tianjin, China; School of Medicine, Nankai University, Tianjin, China; Tianjin Eye Hospital, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Tianjin Eye Institute, Nankai University Affiliated Ophthalmology Hospital, Tianjin, China; Nankai Eye Institute, Nankai University, Tianjin, China. Electronic address:

Purpose: To analyze the effect of individual parameters on the postoperative refractive outcomes of small incision lenticule extraction in myopic eyes using machine learning methods.

Design: Retrospective Clinical Cohort Study METHODS: We included 477 patients (922 eyes) of small incision lenticule extraction at Tianjin Ophthalmology Hospital and divided the patients into two groups to analyzed the factors affecting postoperative refractive outcomes based on the label of postoperative spherical equivalent (SE) ≤ -0.50D.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!