The condition can be classified simply into atraumatic-idiopathic (7.0 per cent) and atraumatic-pathological (93.0 per cent) splenic rupture. Splenomegaly, advanced age and neoplastic disorders are associated with increased ASR-related mortality.
Contemporary endoscopic Simultaneous Localization And Mapping (SLAM) methods accurately compute endoscope poses, however, they only provide a sparse 3D reconstruction that poorly describes the surgical scene. We propose a novel dense SLAM method whose qualities are: 1) Monocular, requiring only RGB images of a hand-held monocular endoscope. 2) Fast, providing endoscope positional tracking and 3D scene reconstruction, running in parallel threads. 3) Dense, yielding an accurate dense reconstruction. 4) Robust, to the severe illumination changes, poor texture and small deformations that are typical in endoscopy. 5) Self-contained, without needing any fiducials nor external tracking devices, therefore it can be smoothly integrated into the surgical workflow. It works as follows. Firstly, accurate cluster frame poses are estimated using the sparse SLAM feature matches. The system segments clusters of video frames according to a parallax criteria. Next, dense matches between cluster frames are computed in parallel by a variational approach that combines Zero Mean Normalized Cross Correlation (ZNCC) and a gradient Huber norm regularizer. This combination copes with challenging lighting and textures at an affordable time budget on a modern GPU. It can outperform pure stereo reconstructions because the frames cluster can provide larger parallax from the endoscope's motion. We provide an extensive experimental validation on real sequences of the porcine abdominal cavity, both in-vivo and exvivo. We also show a qualitative evaluation on human liver. Additionally, we show a comparison with other dense SLAM methods showing the performance gain in terms of accuracy, density and computation time.
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