DocumentCode
1282768
Title
Automatic 3-D segmentation of internal structures of the head in MR images using a combination of similarity and free-form transformations. II. Validation on severely atrophied brains
Author
Hartmann, Steven L. ; Parks, Mitchell H. ; Martin, Peter R. ; Dawant, Benoît M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville, TN, USA
Volume
18
Issue
10
fYear
1999
Firstpage
917
Lastpage
926
Abstract
For pt. I see ibid., vol. 18, no. 10, p. 909-16 (1999). Studies aimed at quantifying neuroanatomical differences between populations require the volume measurements of individual brain structures. If the study contains a large number of images, manual segmentation is not practical. This study tests the hypothesis that a fully automatic, atlas-based segmentation method can be used to quantify atrophy indexes derived from the brain and cerebellum volumes in normal subjects and chronic alcoholics. This is accomplished by registering an atlas volume with a subject volume, first using a global transformation, and then improving the registration using a local transformation. Segmented structures in the atlas volume are then mapped to the corresponding structures in the subject volume using the combined global and local transformations. This technique has been applied to seven normal and seven alcoholic subjects. Three magnetic resonance volumes were obtained for each subject and each volume was segmented automatically, using the atlas-based method. Accuracy was assessed by manually segmenting regions and measuring the similarity between corresponding regions obtained automatically. Repeatability was determined by comparing volume measurements of segmented structures from each acquisition of the same subject. Results demonstrate that the method is accurate, that the results are repeatable, and that it can provide a method for automatic quantification of brain atrophy, even when the degree of atrophy is large.
Keywords
biomedical MRI; brain; image registration; image segmentation; medical image processing; volume measurement; MRI; atlas volume; automatic 3-D segmentation; chronic alcoholics; free-form transformation; head MR images; head internal structures; magnetic resonance imaging; normal subjects; segmented structures; severely atrophied brains; similarity transformation; subject volume; Alcoholism; Atrophy; Automatic testing; Biomedical measurements; Brain; Image segmentation; Magnetic heads; Magnetic resonance; Shape; Volume measurement; Alcohol-Induced Disorders, Nervous System; Alcoholism; Algorithms; Atrophy; Brain; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Reference Values; Reproducibility of Results;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0062
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/42.811273
Filename
811273
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