Real-time volumetric free-hand ultrasound imaging for large-sized organs: A study of imaging the whole spine
Caozhe Li, Enxiang Shen, Haoyang Wang, Yuxin Wang, Jie Yuan, Li Gong,, Di Zhao, Weijing Zhang, Zhibin Jin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a real-time free-hand 3D ultrasound imaging system optimized for large organs like the spine, enabling quick, accurate visualization and diagnosis, demonstrated through scoliosis patient studies.
Contribution
The study presents a novel real-time volumetric ultrasound system with optimized algorithms for large organ imaging and tissue segmentation, improving speed and accuracy over existing methods.
Findings
Achieved 2-minute 3D spine imaging over 500 mm length.
Correlation coefficient of 0.96 with X-ray in scoliosis assessment.
Validated system adaptability across multiple ultrasound devices.
Abstract
Three-dimensional (3D) ultrasound imaging can overcome the limitations of conventional two dimensional (2D) ultrasound imaging in structural observation and measurement. However, conducting volumetric ultrasound imaging for large-sized organs still faces difficulties including long acquisition time, inevitable patient movement, and 3D feature recognition. In this study, we proposed a real-time volumetric free-hand ultrasound imaging system optimized for the above issues and applied it to the clinical diagnosis of scoliosis. This study employed an incremental imaging method coupled with algorithmic acceleration to enable real-time processing and visualization of the large amounts of data generated when scanning large-sized organs. Furthermore, to deal with the difficulty of image feature recognition, we proposed two tissue segmentation algorithms to reconstruct and visualize the spinal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHip disorders and treatments · Spinal Fractures and Fixation Techniques · Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology
