Physics-driven Sonification for Improving Multisensory Needle Guidance in Percutaneous Epicardial Access
Veronica Ruozzi, Sasan Matinfar, Pasquale Vergara, Alessandro Albanesi, Serena Dell'Aversana, Stefano Carugo, Gianluigi Buccoliero, Nassir Navab, Alberto Redaelli, Emiliano Votta

TL;DR
This paper introduces a physics-driven sonification method integrated into XR navigation to improve needle guidance during percutaneous epicardial access, enhancing safety and accuracy.
Contribution
It presents a novel multisensory navigation system combining real-time physics-based audio-visual feedback for cardiac procedures.
Findings
Significantly improved navigation safety with multisensory feedback
Reduced myocardial contact and increased correct access rates
Lower cognitive load during needle guidance
Abstract
Percutaneous epicardial access (PEA), performed on a beating heart under fluoroscopy, enables arrhythmia treatment. However, advancing a needle toward the thin and moving pericardium remains highly challenging and risky. To address this problem, we present a physics-driven sonification method for Extended Reality (XR)-based multisensory navigation to enhance user perception during the critical needle landing phase in PEA. Dynamic cardiac anatomy from 4D CTA was reconstructed and registered to a real-world coordinate system. Real-time needle tracking provided the position of the needle tip relative to moving cardiac structures and drove an audio-visual feedback module. The visual display presented navigational cues and dynamic anatomy, while the auditory display encoded physiological cardiac states using a multilayer physical membrane model. A phantom study was conducted with twelve…
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