CVJan 4, 2018

Plan in 2D, execute in 3D: An augmented reality solution for cup placement in total hip arthroplasty

arXiv:1801.01557v153 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of surgeon-dependent accuracy in hip implant placement, potentially reducing radiation exposure and simplifying surgery, though it is incremental as it builds on existing imaging and AR technologies.

The paper tackles the challenge of achieving proper implant alignment in total hip arthroplasty by proposing an augmented reality system that uses two C-arm X-ray images for planning and 3D visualization, resulting in errors as low as 1.98 mm in translation and 1.10 degrees in anteversion.

Reproducibly achieving proper implant alignment is a critical step in total hip arthroplasty (THA) procedures that has been shown to substantially affect patient outcome. In current practice, correct alignment of the acetabular cup is verified in C-arm X-ray images that are acquired in an anterior-posterior (AP) view. Favorable surgical outcome is, therefore, heavily dependent on the surgeon's experience in understanding the 3D orientation of a hemispheric implant from 2D AP projection images. This work proposes an easy to use intra-operative component planning system based on two C-arm X-ray images that is combined with 3D augmented reality (AR) visualization that simplifies impactor and cup placement according to the planning by providing a real-time RGBD data overlay. We evaluate the feasibility of our system in a user study comprising four orthopedic surgeons at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, and also report errors in translation, anteversion, and abduction as low as 1.98 mm, 1.10 degrees, and 0.53 degrees, respectively. The promising performance of this AR solution shows that deploying this system could eliminate the need for excessive radiation, simplify the intervention, and enable reproducibly accurate placement of acetabular implants.

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