Deformable multisurface segmentation of the spine for orthopedic surgery planning and simulation.

Autor: Haq R; Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Sloan Kettering Institute, Department of Medical Physics, New York, United States., Schmid J; Haute École Spécialisée de la Suisse Occidentale, Geneva School of Health Sciences, Geneva, Switzerland., Borgie R; Naval Medical Center, San Diego, California, United States., Cates J; OrthoGrid Systems, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States., Audette MA; Old Dominion University, Department of Modeling, Simulation, and Visualization Engineering, Norfolk, Virginia, United States.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of medical imaging (Bellingham, Wash.) [J Med Imaging (Bellingham)] 2020 Jan; Vol. 7 (1), pp. 015002. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Feb 22.
DOI: 10.1117/1.JMI.7.1.015002
Abstrakt: Purpose: We describe a shape-aware multisurface simplex deformable model for the segmentation of healthy as well as pathological lumbar spine in medical image data. Approach: This model provides an accurate and robust segmentation scheme for the identification of intervertebral disc pathologies to enable the minimally supervised planning and patient-specific simulation of spine surgery, in a manner that combines multisurface and shape statistics-based variants of the deformable simplex model. Statistical shape variation within the dataset has been captured by application of principal component analysis and incorporated during the segmentation process to refine results. In the case where shape statistics hinder detection of the pathological region, user assistance is allowed to disable the prior shape influence during deformation. Results: Results demonstrate validation against user-assisted expert segmentation, showing excellent boundary agreement and prevention of spatial overlap between neighboring surfaces. This section also plots the characteristics of the statistical shape model, such as compactness, generalizability and specificity, as a function of the number of modes used to represent the family of shapes. Final results demonstrate a proof-of-concept deformation application based on the open-source surgery simulation Simulation Open Framework Architecture toolkit. Conclusions: To summarize, we present a deformable multisurface model that embeds a shape statistics force, with applications to surgery planning and simulation.
(© 2020 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE).)
Databáze: MEDLINE