Catheter Monitoring in Intelligent Endovascular Navigation Systems: Interactive Simulations and Mixed Reality for Enhanced Navigational Awareness
Veronica Ruozzi, Giovanni Battista Regazzo, Maria Chiara Palumbo, Wim-Alexander Beckers, Mouloud Ourak + 5 more
TLDR
A mixed reality system integrates real-time sensor data with biomechanical simulations to monitor catheter-vessel interactions during endovascular navigation.
Key contributions
- Framework integrates real-time catheter reconstruction, interactive simulations, and mixed reality for monitoring.
- Utilized a finite element model (FEM) of the venous pathway, validated in-vitro with a sensorized catheter.
- Achieved stable Hololens 2 rendering (35-40 FPS) and low vessel displacement errors (<2.33mm).
- Demonstrated feasibility of continuous catheter-vessel interaction monitoring for enhanced navigational awareness.
Why it matters
This paper addresses a critical need for improved navigational awareness in endovascular procedures. It combines real-time sensor data, biomechanical simulations, and mixed reality to continuously monitor catheter-vessel interactions. This novel approach enhances operator decision-making, potentially leading to safer and more effective interventions.
Original Abstract
Purpose: Developing and testing a framework that integrates real-time catheter shape reconstruction, interactive simulations, and mixed reality visualization to enable accurate monitoring of catheter-vessel interactions during endovascular navigation. Methods: A finite element model (FEM) of the venous pathway from the right femoral vein to the inferior vena cava was generated from computed tomography data and implemented into an interactive simulation. Catheter motion was imposed as boundary condition, and catheter-vessel contact was modeled with a Lagrange multiplier formulation to compute vessel deformation. The framework was tested in-vitro using a sensorized catheter with Fiber Bragg Grating and electromagnetic sensors as it was advanced through a silicone replica of the vascular anatomy. Real-time sensor read-outs fed the simulation, and the updated catheter and vessel geometries were streamed to Hololens 2. The performance and accuracy of FEM-computed vessel wall displacement were validated against experimental ground-truth obtained via stereo frames triangulation. Results: The simulated time exceeded the real temporal extent by 12% during initial navigation and by 45% when the catheter reached the most tortuous portion. Hololens 2 rendering remained stable at 35-40 frames per second. The median relative displacement error between FEM-computed and ground-truth vessel wall displacements remained below 1 mm and 2.33 mm for these two phases, respectively. Conclusion: The study demonstrates the feasibility of integrating interactive biomechanical simulation with real-time sensor data to enable continuous monitoring of catheter-vessel interactions, with mixed reality visualization serving as a user interface to support operator decision-making.
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