Paper
10 March 2006 Globally optimal model-based matching of anatomical trees
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Modern MDCT and micro-CT scanners are able to produce high-resolution three-dimensional (3D) images of anatomical trees, such as the airway tree and the heart and liver vasculature. An important problem arising in many contexts is the matching of trees depicted in two different images. Three basic steps are used in order to match two trees: (1) image segmentation, to extract the raw trees from a given pair of 3D images; (2) axial-analysis, to define the underlying centerline structure of the trees; and (3) tree matching, to match the centerline structures of the trees. We focus on step (3). This task is complicated by several problems associated with current segmentation and axial-analysis methods, including missing branches, false branches, and other topological errors in the extracted trees. We propose a model-based approach in which the extracted trees are assumed to arise from an initially unknown common structure corrupted by a sequence of modelled topological deformations. We employ a novel mathematical framework to directly incorporate this model into the matching problem. Under this framework, it is possible to define the set of matches that are consistent with a given deformation model. The optimal match is the member of this set that maximizes a user-definable similarity measure. We present several such similarity measures based upon geometrical attributes (e.g., branch lengths, branching angles, and relative branchpoint locations as measured from the 3D image data). We locate the globally optimal match via an efficient dynamic programming algorithm. Our primary analytical result is a set of sufficient conditions on the user-definable similarity measure such that our dynamic programming algorithm is guaranteed to locate an optimal match. Experimental results have been generated for 3D human CT chest scans and micro-CT coronary arterial-tree images of mice. The resulting matches are in good agreement with correspondences defined by human experts.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Michael W. Graham and William E. Higgins "Globally optimal model-based matching of anatomical trees", Proc. SPIE 6144, Medical Imaging 2006: Image Processing, 614415 (10 March 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.651719
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CITATIONS
Cited by 16 scholarly publications and 3 patents.
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KEYWORDS
3D image processing

Image segmentation

3D modeling

Mathematical modeling

Computed tomography

Computer programming

3D scanning

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