Investigating keypoint descriptors for camera relocalization in endoscopy surgery

Rotation Surgery, Computer-Assisted Humans Endoscopy
DOI: 10.1007/s11548-023-02918-x Publication Date: 2023-05-11T01:39:36Z
ABSTRACT
Recent advances in computer vision and machine learning have resulted in endoscopic video-based solutions for dense reconstruction of the anatomy. To effectively use these systems in surgical navigation, a reliable image-based technique is required to constantly track the endoscopic camera's position within the anatomy, despite frequent removal and re-insertion. In this work, we investigate the use of recent learning-based keypoint descriptors for six degree-of-freedom camera pose estimation in intraoperative endoscopic sequences and under changes in anatomy due to surgical resection.Our method employs a dense structure from motion (SfM) reconstruction of the preoperative anatomy, obtained with a state-of-the-art patient-specific learning-based descriptor. During the reconstruction step, each estimated 3D point is associated with a descriptor. This information is employed in the intraoperative sequences to establish 2D-3D correspondences for Perspective-n-Point (PnP) camera pose estimation. We evaluate this method in six intraoperative sequences that include anatomical modifications obtained from two cadaveric subjects.Show that this approach led to translation and rotation errors of 3.9 mm and 0.2 radians, respectively, with 21.86% of localized cameras averaged over the six sequences. In comparison to an additional learning-based descriptor (HardNet++), the selected descriptor can achieve a better percentage of localized cameras with similar pose estimation performance. We further discussed potential error causes and limitations of the proposed approach.Patient-specific learning-based descriptors can relocalize images that are well distributed across the inspected anatomy, even where the anatomy is modified. However, camera relocalization in endoscopic sequences remains a persistently challenging problem, and future research is necessary to increase the robustness and accuracy of this technique.
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