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Mixed reality application for improving the procedural planning of mitral valve disease

Published: 29 January 2020 Publication History

Abstract

3D immersion and interaction technologies as Mixed Reality (MR) and Virtual Reality (VR), have been applied to the visualization of three-dimensional medical image data of the cardiovascular system. This has generated positive findings related to improving the understanding of complex structural pathologies in medical education. However, the field of diagnosis and procedural planning has not been implemented because of the complexity of design 3D interaction that could implicate risk in patient treatment activities, particularly in cardiac structures. Also, It is necessary to consider several variables for designing an efficient 3D interaction elements such as the same visualization/interaction technology, the source of medical images (Computed Tomography, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Ultrasound, and so on), the anatomical structure of interest, among others. Based on previously, the purpose of the present research is to evaluate if with an adequate design of three-dimensional interaction elements it is possible to improve diagnosis and procedural planning of cardiac structures though technologies of 3D immersion and interaction.

References

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Elchanan Bruckheimer, Carmel Rotschild, Tamir Dagan, Gabriel Amir, Aviad Kaufman, Shaul Gelman, and Einat Birk. 2016. Computer-generated real-time digital holography: first time use in clinical medical imaging. European Heart Journal âĂŞ Cardiovascular Imaging 17, 8 (aug 2016), 845--849.
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H Brun, R A B Bugge, L K R Suther, S Birkeland, R Kumar, E Pelanis, and O J Elle. 2018. Mixed reality holograms for heart surgery planning: first user experience in congenital heart disease. European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging (dec 2018).
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  1. Mixed reality application for improving the procedural planning of mitral valve disease

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      CLIHC '19: Proceedings of the IX Latin American Conference on Human Computer Interaction
      September 2019
      233 pages
      ISBN:9781450376792
      DOI:10.1145/3358961
      Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author.

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      Association for Computing Machinery

      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      Published: 29 January 2020

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      Author Tags

      1. 3D interaction
      2. 3D visualization
      3. mitral valve disease
      4. user design

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      • Extended-abstract

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      CLIHC '19
      CLIHC '19: IX Latin American Conference on Human Computer Interaction
      September 30 - October 4, 2019
      Panama City, Panama

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      Overall Acceptance Rate 14 of 42 submissions, 33%

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