Paper
13 March 2008 Role of computer aided detection (CAD) integration: case study with meniscal and articular cartilage CAD applications
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Knee-related injuries involving the meniscal or articular cartilage are common and require accurate diagnosis and surgical intervention when appropriate. With proper techniques and experience, confidence in detection of meniscal tears and articular cartilage abnormalities can be quite high. However, for radiologists without musculoskeletal training, diagnosis of such abnormalities can be challenging. In this paper, the potential of improving diagnosis through integration of computer-aided detection (CAD) algorithms for automatic detection of meniscal tears and articular cartilage injuries of the knees is studied. An integrated approach in which the results of algorithms evaluating either meniscal tears or articular cartilage injuries provide feedback to each other is believed to improve the diagnostic accuracy of the individual CAD algorithms due to the known association between abnormalities in these distinct anatomic structures. The correlation between meniscal tears and articular cartilage injuries is exploited to improve the final diagnostic results of the individual algorithms. Preliminary results from the integrated application are encouraging and more comprehensive tests are being planned.
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Nabile Safdar, Bharath Ramakrishna, Ganesh Saiprasad, Khan Siddiqui, and Eliot Siegel M.D. "Role of computer aided detection (CAD) integration: case study with meniscal and articular cartilage CAD applications", Proc. SPIE 6919, Medical Imaging 2008: PACS and Imaging Informatics, 69190J (13 March 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.779304
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Cartilage

Injuries

CAD systems

Computer aided diagnosis and therapy

Computer aided design

Diagnostics

Detection and tracking algorithms

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