Title : 
Volumetric anatomical modeling from medical images
         
        
            Author : 
Archip, Neculai ; Rohling, Robert
         
        
            Author_Institution : 
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., British Columbia Univ., Vancouver, BC, Canada
         
        
        
        
        
        
            Abstract : 
Many clinical applications, such as surgical planning, require volumetric models of anatomical structures represented as a set of tetrahedra. A method of constructing anatomical models from medical images is presented. The method starts with a set of contours segmented from the medical images by a clinician and produces a model that has high fidelity with the contours. Unlike most modeling methods, the contours are not restricted to lie on parallel planes. The main steps are a 3D Delaunay tetrahedralization, culling of non-object tetrahedra, and refinement of the tetrahedral mesh. The result is a high-quality set of tetrahedra whose surface points are guaranteed to match the original contours. The key is to use the distance-map and bit-volume structures that were created along with the contours. The method is demonstrated on both computed tomography and 3D ultrasound data. Models of 170,000 tetrahedra are constructed on a standard workstation in approximately ten seconds.
         
        
            Keywords : 
biomedical ultrasonics; computerised tomography; image segmentation; medical image processing; mesh generation; physiological models; 3D Delaunay tetrahedralization; 3D ultrasound data; anatomical models; computed tomography; medical images; nonobject tetrahedra; segmented contours; surgical planning; tetrahedral mesh; Anatomical structure; Application software; Biomedical engineering; Biomedical imaging; Computed tomography; Electrical capacitance tomography; Image segmentation; Magnetic resonance imaging; Surgery; Workstations; Delaunay; contours; volumetric modeling;
         
        
        
        
            Conference_Titel : 
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2004. IEMBS '04. 26th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
         
        
            Print_ISBN : 
0-7803-8439-3
         
        
        
            DOI : 
10.1109/IEMBS.2004.1403547