The Joint Medical Visualisation
Project:
There is a common problem facing medical teaching
- access to dissection is becoming more and more limited and there is
currently a reducing number of anatomists, thus
radiological data will, of necessity, become an important teaching tool
for anatomy in the near future. The purpose of this project is to develop
new tools, resources that make use of 3D stereoscopic visualisation and
investigate the new methods of teaching and learning that these tools
enable.
The proposed solution is a combination of
elements: low cost stereoscopic
visualisation systems, a powerful volume rendering tool (OsgVolume)
and an easy to use authoring environment (Present3D) that enables course
materials, lectures and individual learning programs to be created.
Rather than view MRI/CT scan data as a series of individual slices, a
volumetric program processes those slices and combines to create a
complete 3
dimensional volume which
can then be manipulated interactively. The use of stereoscopic visualisation
gives true depth perception essential for understanding complex 3d
data and volumetric data benefits greatly from this.
To work with the volume data interactively and in realtime a range
of tools are required, clipping planes, adjustment of transparency
of particular
colours or luminance values, selection tools and others, so the area
of interest can then be extracted or viewed as a complete entity
within the
overall volume, dramatically improving understanding of the actual shape,
form and interconnectivity of, for instance, a brain tumour. Other more
specific tools will be required to meet demands of the wide range of
practitioners who will benefit from this project, but the first aim
is to concentrate
on the requirements for medical teaching and research, with
use for patient information systems probably following.
The visual quality of MRI/CT scans and Confocal Microscopy data may
be variable and this can be dramatically improved by preprocessing
techniques.
For instance, the attached image (volume.jpg) has had normals calculated
as part of the volume creation process, this produces apparent iso-surfaces
and enables the light source to be moved interactively over the surface
allowing fine detail to be revealed.
Current medical volume rendering programs are usually limited in the
size of volume dataset and resolution of images that can be displayed.
It is
the aim of this project to enable much larger datasets and extremely
high resolution images to be used and still be fully interactive on standard
computer hardware. The ultimate goal is to be be able to handle the entire
Visible Human 2 data where each slice can be 120,000 x 90,000 pixels.
Where
possible, this will be achieved by using already available and proven
techniques, like the paging of high resolution imagery currently used
in the OSG for
terrain visualisation.
A proof of concept has been completed which enables example MRI or
CT scan data to be processed to recreate a 3D volume data that can
then
be loaded
in Present3D an easy to use realtime interactive stereoscopic visualisation
authoring tool. The results of this have informed the technical requirements
for the OsgVolume project.As the project has developed it has become
clear that there are potentially three complementary joint projects:
2.1 OsgVolume:
The open source project to develop an advanced medical volume rendering
core and specific medical tools that are built on it. By its nature this
project will be incremental and modular.
2.1.1 Phase One :
An initial enabling project this will include the development of the
OsgVolume core volumetric module, OSG loaders to directly handle the
Dicom format
from the various medical scanners and incorporation of simple (easy to
use) volumetric tools. As a minimum this project would aim to provide
the basic functionality required to enable OsgVolume to be used for
teaching
purposes. Implement the required application(s), developing incrementally
to provide opportunities to test out work in progress and refine the
requirements and deliverables of the application(s) within the time/financial
constraints
of the project.
2.1.2 Phase Two and beyond:
Ongoing development of OsgVolume to increase size of dataset and improve
imaging techniques and tools available. It is already obvious that a
number of medical research projects will benefit from the availability
of OsgVolume
and it is anticipated that many custom applications will be built on
the foundations of the OsgVolume project. For instance, the Royal College
of
Surgeons has indicated that it considers a pre-operative planning tool
to be highly desirable. At this point it is hoped that the project will
start to take a life of its own with a growing community of developers
contributing back to the core project to ensure its ongoing development
as has happened with the OSG itself.
2.2 Medical Data Repository:
It is essential to have access to a shared resource of high quality
anonomised volumetric, polygonal, point cloud, video and image data
that can be used
in the creation of teaching materials. Although a major feature of the
overall project is the OsgVolume project and the collection of MRI, CT
and Confocal Microscopy is key to the success of this, the huge benefits
of stereo photography and stereo video should not be overlooked. Laser
scans, 3D models, segmented from volume data, built by hand or exported
from other medical software should also be included. It is critical that
accurate and relevant metadata is associated with each dataset. This
project could be undertaken by a single institution but would benefit
enormously
from becoming a national or international resource. It is anticipated
that this would be an internet based project and would be jointly
funded by
the participants.
2.3 Courseware Materials:
The use of Present3D as an authoring environment does mean that lecturers
can create their own course materials, however, it would make sense for
the schools to collaborate on the development of core materials that
set the standards and develop the new techniques that will ensure that
maximum
benefit is derived from this step change in medical education and that
proper assessment and quality control procedures are put in place and
feed back into the ongoing development of OsgVolume. A Centre of Excellence
is an obvious goal for this project that then brands the courseware materials
and distributes for worldwide use on a non-profit basis.
Contact us
If you would like to host an event, more information
on stereoscopic visualisation or would like to support or join the OsgVolume
and Medical Visualisation projects our contact
information is here.
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