Abstract:
A device and a method for calibrating the coordinate system of imaging systems having a tracking system prior or during image data acquisition, e.g. by way of magnetic resonance tomography.

Description:
This application is the national stage of PCT/EP2013/073169, filed Nov. 6, 2013 and also claims Paris convention priority from DE 10 2012 021 623.9, filed Nov. 6, 2012. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     The invention concerns a device and a method for calibrating coordinate systems of imaging systems with a tracking system prior to or during image data acquisition, e.g. by means of magnetic resonance tomography. 
     Modern medical or biomedical imaging methods provide detailed images of living organisms. Such methods include i.a. magnetic resonance tomography MRT, computer tomography CT and nuclear medical imaging, such as e.g. positron emission tomography (PET), single photon emitted computer tomography (SPECT) or intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). 
     A large number of these methods require long measurement times of many seconds or minutes and are therefore prone to image quality losses due to movement of the measurement object, a patient or an animal, which could render the recordings useless in that so-called “blurred recordings” are produced. 
     Methods for reducing or eliminating these aberrations caused by movement of the object are e.g. prospective or retrospective motion correction, in which the movement of the measurement object is either already compensated for during recording by means of suitable tracking of the measuring field or during image reconstruction. For this reason, even in case of movement during the measurement, the generated images do not show any corresponding aberrations, as described in citations 1-11. 
     The movement information may thereby either be measured by means of the imaging modality itself, often referred to e.g. as “navigators”. However, in most cases this requires an extension or disturbance of the measurement. 
     Alternatively, the movement information may e.g. be optically detected by a position measurement system or also a tracking system, thereby performing the imaging method itself without disturbance. One necessary step in case of position detection using a system of this type is the calibration of the coordinate systems between the imaging system and the position measurement system, also called tracking system. In this case, the spatial transformation (translation and rotation with a total of six degrees of freedom) between the two modalities must be exactly determined as described in citations 5 and 12. 
     EP 1 913 333 B1 discloses a device and a method for detecting a drift in calibrated tracking systems for medical applications in order to be able to localize features with respect to one or more coordinate systems within a reference coordinate system using a calibrated tracking system to which a motion sensor is mounted for detecting movements of the tracking system. When such a movement is detected, the tracking system is re-calibrated. 
     The common methods for calibrating the coordinate systems of tracking systems and imaging systems include measurement of a known object, which is visible for both methods, by both systems, both the imaging modality and the tracking system, either in only one position or in different object positions. The calibration accuracy that can be achieved in this connection depends on the measurement accuracy of both systems and the number of measurements. Due to the fact that one system and in this case usually the imaging system, shows the greater measurement errors and is substantially slower, the accuracy of the procedure is limited and calibration may be time-consuming (minutes to hours). 
     The problems of these common methods are therefore: 
     1) For high accuracy, the measurements must be performed in several positions with high measurement accuracy, i.e. with respect to the spatial resolution of the imaging modality, and therefore require long measurement times. 
     2) The calibration accuracy is limited by measurement errors of both systems e.g. by errors in the reproduction accuracy of the imaging modality. 
     3) Calibration may be very time-consuming and may take up to several hours. 
     4) When the systems are changed, re-calibration requires renewed performance of all measurements with the full expenditure of time. Undesired calibration changes may also result from slow instabilities, so-called drifts, in the measurement system. 
     5) The transfer of the calibration between different imaging modalities and therapy modalities e.g. for radiation therapy, again requires the full calibration effort for each imaging modality. 
     In view of the above, it is the object of the present invention to obtain fast and precise calibration of the coordinate systems of imaging systems and tracking systems without having to measure an object, which can be detected by both systems, in one or more positions. 
     A further object of the present invention consists in avoiding useless recordings due to object movements during imaging. It would furthermore be desirable to enable combination of several imaging modalities for detecting objects without increasing the calibration expense. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     This object is achieved by a device and method in accordance with the independent claims as well as the further advantageous embodiments in accordance with the dependent claims. 
     Proposed is a device for calibrating tracking systems in imaging systems, e.g. for MRT or IMRT or CT, comprising at least:
         a tracking system with a coordinate system,   at least one imaging system, and   at least one first marker that is arranged as a reference marker stationarily relative to the imaging system, and the position and orientation of which are calibrated in a coordinate system of the imaging system.       

     The device comprises at least one tracking system which detects the position of one or more markers, characterized by six degrees of freedom for rotation and translation, once or repeatedly. 
     The location of the reference marker relative to the imaging instrument is known from a pre-calibration. If, e.g. a camera system is mounted to a wall or the ceiling of a room or is designed as a mobile tracking system, as it is the case in many applications, the tracking system can be re-calibrated within seconds by means of the inventive fixed marker. In contrast to the method of EP 1 913 333 B1, the present invention enables repeated absolute calibration by means of the first marker that is used as an external marker or reference marker in order to calibrate the tracking system, wherein the tracking system is not calibrated to the first coordinate system. For this reason, the tracking system can be calibrated by the calibrated marker with one position recording in less than 1 second. 
     In addition to fast calibration of the tracking system, permanent re-calibration of the tracking system during the imaging proceedings is moreover also possible due to the calibrated marker. 
     In one embodiment of the invention, the first marker cooperates with the tracking system in such a fashion that a changing position of the tracking system during imaging can be detected via the tracking system by means of the first marker and the tracking system can be re-calibrated. 
     In a further embodiment of the invention, the tracking system may be arranged outside or, in particular, also within the imaging system. It may be arranged permanently or also temporarily, i.e. in a removable fashion. In this case, repeated calibration or also re-calibration would be necessary. 
     In a further embodiment of the invention, the tracking system may be arranged outside of the imaging system. 
     At least one of these first markers is a permanent stationary reference point that is mounted and arranged within the imaging system. One or more of these first markers may also be arranged outside of one or more imaging systems. 
     The first marker may also be arranged outside of the imaging system. 
     Stationary with respect to the marker thereby refers to the stationary mounting of the marker relative to the imaging system. This marker is calibrated by single exact determination of its position and orientation in the coordinate system of the imaging modality, via a so-called cross calibration. 
     Further markers may be mounted to movable objects within the imaging system. 
     In accordance therewith, in a further development of the invention, at least one second marker is provided to be arranged on a movable object such that the position and the orientation of the marker in the coordinate system of the tracking system can be detected during imaging and can be transferred to the coordinate system of the imaging system. This enables tracking of the orientation and position of image recording in a continuous fashion or in regular intervals during imaging such that the imaging volume remains stationary with respect to the moved measurement object. This reduces or eliminates aberrations due to movement of the object. 
     In one advantageous embodiment of the invention, each of a plurality of markers is arranged in imaging systems such that their position and orientation in the coordinate system of the respective imaging system are calibrated, wherein the position and orientation of the marker arranged on the movable object can be transferred from the coordinate system of the imaging system to the coordinate systems of the imaging systems through measurement of the position and orientation by means of the tracking system. 
     This device and this method enable automatic transfer of recording positions from one imaging modality to another without having to record the orientation. This enables image recordings e.g. of patients or test animals in an exactly identical position and section orientation between different imaging modalities and can reduce the duration of the examination or reduce the radiation exposure. This also enables transfer of e.g. the coordinates of an image point that was detected in an imaging modality such as e.g. the position of a tumor or another lesion to therapy systems e.g. a radiation device. Up to now, external fixations have been frequently used that force the patient into a predetermined position. With this, recordings of several imaging modalities can furthermore be made to coincide in order to represent the results simultaneously and spatially correctly superimposed. This enables combination of different information of different imaging systems for diagnostics as well as utilization of the information of an imaging modality for performing interventions during imaging on a different modality. In this fashion, it would be possible to measure e.g. target regions for an intervention from a purely diagnostic imaging modality, e.g. tumors, by means of MRT, and transfer them to an interventional imaging modality such as e.g. intraoperative X-ray or angiography in order to support the intervention. 
     The dynamic position of these objects is detected by the tracking system in its internal coordinate system and can e.g. be used for correcting object movements during image recording. Fast calibration of the tracking system is possible with one single measurement of the position of the stationary marker with the tracking system. The position of the tracking system in the coordinates of the imaging system can be determined from the coordinates of the marker in the coordinates of the tracking system and the knowledge of the position of the stationary marker in the coordinates of the imaging system. Since the position measurement system is generally much faster and more accurate than the imaging modality or also the imaging system, this enables highly precise re-calibration that is also extremely fast in case of several measurements. 
     In accordance with a further embodiment of the invention, there is a method for calibration of tracking systems in imaging systems, e.g. for MRT or IMRT or CT comprising at least the following steps:
         providing a tracking system with a coordinate system and at least   one imaging system,   providing at least one first marker that is arranged as a reference marker stationarily relative to the imaging system and the position and orientation of which have been calibrated in a coordinate system of the imaging system.       

     In a further development of the method, the marker cooperates with the tracking system in such a fashion that the tracking system detects a changing position of the tracking system during imaging via the first marker and the tracking system is re-calibrated. 
     In one embodiment, calibration may be performed as a one-time calibration in the form of a cross calibration of the coordinate system of the tracking system with the coordinates c 0 , C, wherein c 0  is the translation quaternion and C the rotation quaternion, wherein the position and orientation r 0 , R of the first marker in the coordinate system of the tracking system are stored and the current position and orientation x 0 , X of the reference point in the coordinate system of the tracking system are used for calibration in order to calculate the current cross calibration s 0 , S as follows:
 
 S=X*RC  
 
wherein X* is the conjugated rotation quaternion of the quaternion X and
 
 s   0   =c   0   +C*r   0   C−S*x   0   S  
 
wherein C* and S* are the conjugates of the rotation quaternions C and S.
 
     In a first variant of this method, the stationary reference point is also used during the measurement by means of the imaging modality, during which the changing position of a further marker on the imaging object is detected in order to dynamically monitor or correct calibration. This enables detection and compensation of temporal instabilities or drifts in the position measurement system. It therefore provides dynamic re-calibration of the coordinate systems. Assuming that the reference marker is stationary, an apparent movement is caused by these temporal instabilities and can be used for correction. 
     For correcting the drift, the initial positions (translation quaternion) and orientations (rotation quaternion) of the object t 0 , T 0  and reference marker d 0 , D 0  are measured. The geometric transformation between these two x 0 , X 0  is therefore:
 
 X=D*   0   T   0  and  x   0   =t   0   −X*d   0   X  
 
     If t 1 , T j  and d j , D j  are the current tracking data at the point in time j, the corrected object position t j corr , T j corr  can be calculated as:
 
 T   j corr   =D   j   D*   0   T   j  and  t   j corr   =t   j   −T*   j corr   X *( d   0   −d   j )× T   j   corr  
 
     In one further embodiment of the invention this “drift correction” is performed by mounting the reference marker at a stationary point (mechanically) independently of the imaging modality. This enables detection and compensation of even the smallest movements of the imaging system. Such movements, e.g. vibrations may be generated e.g. in magnetic resonance tomography in measurements with very strong gradient switching e.g. in diffusion measurements. The dynamic re-calibration is performed analogously to the previous variants. 
     In one alternative embodiment variant, this dynamic correction is performed in that the reference marker is mounted to the imaging modality and the tracking system is stationarily mounted (mechanically) independently of the imaging modality. This also allows detection of possible mechanical movement of the imaging system. 
     In a further method variant, several such stationary markers are mounted in different imaging modalities and are exactly calibrated once, i.e. are calibrated relative to the coordinate system of the imaging modality. 
     In accordance therewith, in this embodiment of the invention, each of a plurality of markers is arranged in the imaging systems such that their position and orientation in the coordinate system of the respective imaging system has been calibrated, wherein the position and orientation of the marker arranged on the movable object are converted from the coordinate system of the imaging system into the coordinate systems of the imaging systems. 
     By using these reference markers, examinations of the same object or the same patients on a plurality of devices or imaging systems or imaging modalities can be made to exactly coincide. 
     In a further development of the method, at least one second marker is arranged on a movable object such that the position and orientation of the marker in the coordinate system of the tracking system is detected during imaging and is converted into the coordinate system of the imaging system. 
     This enables tracking of the orientation and position of the image recording on a continuous basis or at regular intervals during imaging such that the imaging volume remains stationary with respect to the moved measurement object. This reduces or eliminates aberrations caused by movement of the object. 
     The figures below exemplarily illustrate and describe in more detail embodiments of the invention, wherein the invention is not limited to these. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING 
         FIG. 1  schematically shows an arrangement of a device  1  for calibrating a tracking system in an imaging system; and 
         FIGS. 2 a , 2 b  and 2 c    schematically show an arrangement of a plurality of imaging systems with associated coordinate systems. 
     
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
     The reference numerals of corresponding elements in the figures are identical. 
     In accordance with  FIG. 1 , the schematically illustrated device  1  comprises a tracking system  10  which is arranged in an imaging system  20  e.g. for MRT. The tracking system  10  has a coordinate system  50 . The device moreover has a first marker  70  which is stationary relative to the imaging system  20  as a reference marker and the position and orientation of which are calibrated in a coordinate system  60  of the imaging system  20 . 
     The tracking system  10  and the first marker  70  are arranged within the imaging system  20 . 
     A second marker  30  is provided on a movable object  40  such that the position and orientation of the marker  30  can be detected in the coordinate system  50  of the tracking system  10  during imaging and can be transferred to the coordinate system  60  of the imaging system  20 . 
     In principle, the device  1  for calibrating tracking systems  10  in imaging systems  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c , e.g. for MRT or IMRT or CT, may comprise at least the following components:
         a tracking system  10  with a coordinate system  50 ,   at least one imaging system  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c , and   at least one first marker  70   a ,  70   b ,  70   c  that is arranged stationarily relative to the imaging system  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c  as a reference marker, and the position and orientation of which are calibrated in a coordinate system  60   a ,  60   b ,  60   c  of the imaging system  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c  as is also illustrated below in  FIGS. 2 a   - 2   c.          

       FIGS. 2 a , 2 b  and 2 c    schematically show an arrangement of several imaging systems with associated coordinate systems analogous to  FIG. 1 , wherein in  FIGS. 2 a , 2 b  and 2 c   , the same object  40  is examined in each case with a first marker  70   a ,  70   b ,  70   c  in different imaging or therapy modalities  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c.    
     In accordance therewith, each of a plurality of markers  70   a ,  70   b ,  70   c  is arranged in imaging systems  20   a  e.g. for MRT,  20   b  e.g. for CT, and  20   c  e.g. for IMRT but also PET such that their positions and orientations in the coordinate systems  60   a ,  60   b ,  60   c  of the respective imaging system  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c  have been calibrated, wherein the position and orientation of the object marker  30  can be transferred from the coordinate system  60   a  of the imaging system  20   a  to the coordinate systems  60   b  and/or  60   c  of the imaging systems  20   b  and/or  20   c.    
     The second marker  30  is advantageously mounted for arrangement on the movable object  40  such that the position and orientation of the marker  30  in the coordinate system  50  of the tracking system  10  can be detected during imaging and can be transferred to or be converted into the coordinate system  60   a ,  60   b ,  60   c  of the imaging system  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c.    
     The first marker  70   a ,  70   b ,  70   c  thereby cooperates with the tracking system  10  in such a fashion that a changing position of the tracking system  10  during imaging can be detected via the tracking system  10  by means of the first marker  70   a ,  70   b ,  70   c  and the tracking system  10  can be re-calibrated. 
     The tracking system  10  can thereby be arranged within or outside of the imaging system  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c.    
     The first marker  70   a ,  70   b ,  70   c  can also be arranged within or outside of the imaging system  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c.    
     Each of a plurality of markers  70   a ,  70   b ,  70   c  are arranged in respective imaging systems  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c  such that their positions and orientations in the coordinate system  60   a ,  60   b ,  60   c  of the respective imaging system  20   a ,  20   b ,  20   c  are calibrated, wherein the position and orientation of the marker  30  arranged on the movable object  40  can be converted from the coordinate system  60   a  of the imaging system  20   a  into the coordinate systems  60   b ,  60   c  of the imaging systems  20   b ,  20   c.    
     In each case, the imaging modality is naturally a different one, e.g. MRT, CT, IMRT, PET, SPECT and the like, wherein the reference marker is a different one in each case, since it is permanently connected to the imaging device. The tracking system may also be a different one or the same and be mobile or be stationary within or outside of the imaging system. 
     LITERATURE 
     
         
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