Method and apparatus for determining a leg length difference and a leg offset
US-2016022173-A1 · Jan 28, 2016 · US
US10244967B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10244967-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715617793-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jun 8, 2017 |
| Priority date | Apr 3, 2013 |
| Publication date | Apr 2, 2019 |
| Grant date | Apr 2, 2019 |
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A method, performed by a computer, for measuring geometric length and offset differences of a subject element using landmarks obtained through, for example, analysis of medical data images. The method may include obtaining medical image data from a medical imaging device. The method includes measuring, by the computer, a first landmark vector between a femoral landmark and a second landmark at a first point in time from, for example, the medical data images. Further, the method includes measuring, by the computer, a second landmark vector between the femoral landmark and the second landmark at a second point in time which is later than the first point in time from, for example, the medical data images. Calculating an orthogonal projection of the first landmark vector into a sagittal plane and using the direction of the orthogonal projection of the first landmark vector into the sagittal plane as a length direction. Calculating a direction which is perpendicular to the sagittal plane and using this direction as an offset direction and calculating the length difference in the length direction and the offset difference in the offset direction from the first landmark vector and the second landmark vector.
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The invention claimed is: 1. A method for analysing images, performed by a computer, through analysis of medical image data, comprising the steps of: obtaining medical image data from a medical imaging device, the medical imaging device generating at least a CT or MR medical image data during a scan of a patient's femur connected to a patient's pelvis; measuring, by the computer, a first landmark vector between a femoral landmark and a second landmark at a first point in time from the medical image data; measuring, by the computer, a second landmark vector between the femoral landmark and the second landmark at a second point in time which is later than the first point in time from the medical image data; calculating, by the computer, an orthogonal projection of the first landmark vector into a sagittal plane and using the direction of the orthogonal projection of the first landmark vector into the sagittal plane as an element length direction; calculating, by the computer, a direction which is perpendicular to the sagittal plane and using the calculated direction perpendicular to the sagittal plane as an element offset direction; calculating, by the computer, the element length difference in the element length direction and the element offset difference in the element offset direction from the first landmark vector and the second landmark vector; preparing, by the computer, for presentation and output on a display unit of a medical navigation system the calculated element length difference and using the calculated element length difference in the medical navigation system. 2. A method, performed by a computer, for measuring a leg length difference and a leg offset difference of a patient's leg including a femur connected to a pelvis, comprising the steps of: measuring, by a registration tool operably connected to a computer, a first landmark vector between a femoral landmark and a second landmark at a first point in time; transmitting from the registration tool to an input unit of the computer in a medical navigation system, the measurement values of the first landmark vector; measuring by the registration tool operably connected to the computer, a second landmark vector between the femoral landmark and the second landmark at a second point in time which is later than the first point in time; transmitting from the registration tool to the input unit of the computer in the medical navigation system, the measurement values of the second landmark vector; calculating, by the computer, an orthogonal projection of the first landmark vector into a sagittal plane and using the direction of the orthogonal projection of the first landmark vector into the sagittal plane as a leg length direction; calculating, by the computer, a direction which is perpendicular to the sagittal plane and using this direction as a leg offset direction; and calculating, by the computer, the leg length difference in the leg length direction and the leg offset difference in the leg offset direction from the first landmark vector and the second landmark vector; preparing, by the computer, for presentation and output on a display device connected to the medical navigation computer the calculated leg length difference and using the calculated leg length difference in the medical navigation system. 3. The method according to claim 2 , wherein an orientation of the sagittal plane is defined as being horizontal. 4. The method according to claim 2 , wherein an orientation of the sagittal plane is determined as the orientation of a surface of an operating table on which the patient is located. 5. The method according to claim 2 , wherein an orientation of the sagittal plane is determined from a plurality of inertial sensor data which are acquired from an inertial sensor attached to the tibia of the leg while the femur is locked in position and the tibia is flexed relative to the femur. 6. The method according to claim 4 , wherein a first sagittal plane is determined for the first landmark vector, and a second sagittal plane is determined for the second landmark vector, and orthogonal projections of the landmark vectors into the corresponding sagittal plane are calculated. 7. The method according to claim 2 , wherein calculating the leg length difference and the leg offset difference involves calculating a first orthogonal projection of the second landmark vector into the sagittal plane, calculating a second orthogonal projection of the first orthogonal projection onto the projection of the first landmark vector, determining the leg length difference as the difference in length between the projection of the first landmark vector and the second projection of the second landmark vector, and calculating the leg offset difference as the difference between the components of the first landmark vector and the second landmark vector in the leg offset direction. 8. The method according to claim 2 , wherein calculating the leg length difference and the leg offset difference involves calculating an orthogonal projection of the second landmark vector into the sagittal plane, rotating the orthogonal projection of the second landmark vector within the sagittal plane such that its direction matches the direction of the projection of the first landmark vector, determining the leg length difference as the difference in length between the projection of the first landmark vector and the rotated second landmark vector, and calculating the leg offset difference as the difference between the components of the first landmark vector and the second landmark vector in the leg offset direction. 9. The method according to claim 2 , wherein calculating the leg length difference and the leg offset difference involves calculating a difference vector between the first landmark vector and the second landmark vector and decomposing the difference vector into its components in the leg length direction and the leg offset direction. 10. The method according to claim 2 , comprising the steps of obtaining neutral position data which define a neutral position of the leg at the first point in time and obtaining second position data which define a position of the leg at the second point in time, wherein the second landmark vector is only determined if the second position data match the neutral position data. 11. The method according to claim 10 , wherein the position data are acquired from an inertial sensor. 12. The method according to claim 2 , wherein the first and second landmark vectors are calculated from two landmark reference vectors, wherein each landmark reference vector represents a vector between the respective landmark and the reference point common to the femoral and second landmarks and at least one of the landmark reference vectors is determined using a light beam which is emitted from a light beam source and pointed at an offset point, the light beam source having a known distance from the landmark and a known orientation relative to the direct line from the light source to the landmark, determining the first and second landmark vectors, including acquiring the direction of the light beam and the distance between the light beam source and the offset point, and calculating the landmark reference vector from the known distance between the light source and the landmark, the known orientation of the light source relative to the direct line from the light source to the landmark, the direction of the light beam, the distance between the light beam source and the offset point and the reference offset between the offset point and the reference point. 13. The method according to claim 12 , wherein the second landmark is a virtual l
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