From Deseret News archives:
BYU scientists create tool for 'virtual surgery'
The software, Live Surface, could be valuable for preoperative exams, diagnosis and evaluation and for showing patients and their loved ones medical information in a form they can understand, said William S. Barrett, a BYU professor who, with graduate student Chris Armstrong, developed the software.
It might even have the potential to eliminate some exploratory surgeries, said Barrett, although "the proof is in the pudding, and we don't know that quite yet."
The program lets surgeons visualize any part of a patient's anatomy by extracting a 3-D computer image from MRI and CT scans or similar data. But doctors aren't the only ones who may find the program useful, said Barrett. The software also can be used to extract a single actor's performance or inanimate objects from video clips.
The 3-D rendering of anatomy is not what's new about the software. Nice renderings of anatomy have been around for years.
A computer program, in processing a photographic image, doesn't know people or cats or birds or dirt roads, Barrett explained. When it looks at the picture, "it says there are a lot of ways this could be divided up."
The program, however, uses an algorithm that lets the computer do the "heavy lifting" of bringing out the image in a simple, interactive and very fast process that requires only minimal input from the user.
Barrett credits recent breakthroughs in algorithms that allow the program to work in a kind of paint-by- number fashion, extracting objects from coarse to increasingly refined levels. As for fast, he said, "we're able to traverse 10-15 levels of the hierarchy in less than a half-second."
It's as simple as telling the program, "This is the object I want," and "I don't want that."
Most of the programs that let doctors look at patient anatomy are either too basic or take too long to be useful. Live Surface is interactive and fast, Barrett said. And it lets a physician isolate tricky anatomy such as soft tissue, including blood vessels, hearts and muscles.
Comments
- Today on TV 12:49 a.m.
- Wanted: Bank robber with bad breath 12:40 a.m.
- Philippine police clash with clan 12:28 a.m.
- Officer responding to call killed 12:28 a.m.
- Editorial: Fine-tune state workweek 12:18 a.m.
- Let's keep energy money in the U.S. 12:18 a.m.
- How to pay for the war 12:17 a.m.
- Feast of Guadalupe nourishes soul 12:17 a.m.
- Obama's strategy is a road map 12:17 a.m.
- Letters: Create livelihoods 12:17 a.m.
- Y., U. to learn bowl destinations
- BYU and Utah's bowl games
- BYU professor remembered
- The forgotten ship: USS Utah
- Branch president without a congregation
- BYU basketball: Cougars crush Dons
- Utahns want health care reform bills
- Kurt Bestor: Joy for the world
- Jazz upset by Wolves
- Urn of baby rests with sailors
- Letters: Liberal because LDS
257 - Y. profs: Beck not all-knowing
214 - Hate not limited to 1 in-state rivalry
189 - Aggies shoot past Cougars
179 - N.Y. Senate rejects gay marriage
130 - George lost in rivalry hatefest
113 - TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl
110 - Unbeaten BYU takes trip to Logan
105 - Ed Smart 'appalled' at testimony
97 - Harpring's NBA career is over
95
Trolley Square's annual Holiday Open House will feature visits with...
That does it — I'm having an affair! Thanks to Tiger Woods, David...
First, a big thank you to all who posted questions here for me to ask...
Sorry earlier I meant to say that tracks seems to travel at 35 miles an hour...
'Peter Frumhoff, the director of science and policy at the Union of...
The Non-BCS crowd ought to create their own title game...their own brand, and...
That's the whole of your defense of GOP resistance to badly-needed ethics...
Your criticism should hardly be focused on Bennett alone. What about all the...
'Wired's Threat Level blog reported on November 20 that Gavin Schmidt, a...
The reality of climate change is supported by multiple lines of evidence and...
I had the priviledge of staying in the LeBaron home on severl occasions as I...
So the unemployment rate has dropped to "just" 10%, huh? I wonder what that...
Ahh for the love of money...what money can buy!!!




You can be the first to comment on this story.