Title :
Pure phase-encoded MRI and classification of solids
Author :
Ghosh, Pratik ; Laidlaw, David H. ; Fleischer, Kurt W. ; Barr, Alan H. ; Jacobs, Russell E.
Author_Institution :
Div. of Biol., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
fDate :
9/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Here, the authors combine a pure phase-encoded magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method with a new tissue-classification technique to make geometric models of a human tooth. They demonstrate the feasibility of three-dimensional imaging of solids using a conventional 11.7-T NMR spectrometer. In solid-state imaging, confounding line-broadening effects are typically eliminated using coherent averaging methods. Instead, the authors circumvent them by detecting the proton signal at a fixed phase-encode time following the radio-frequency excitation. By a judicious choice of the phase-encode time in the MRI protocol, the authors differentiate enamel and dentine sufficiently to successfully apply a new classification algorithm. This tissue-classification algorithm identifies the distribution of different material types, such as enamel and dentine, in volumetric data. In this algorithm, the authors treat a voxel as a volume, not as a single point, and assume that each voxel may contain more than one material. They use the distribution of MR image intensities within each voxel-sized volume to estimate the relative proportion of each material using a probabilistic approach. This combined approach, involving MRI and data classification, is directly applicable to bone imaging and hard-tissue contrast-based modeling of biological solids
Keywords :
biomedical NMR; bone; image classification; medical image processing; 11.7 T; 3D imaging; MR image intensities distribution; biological solids; bone imaging; classification algorithm; confounding line-broadening effects; dentine; enamel; fixed phase-encode time; geometric models; hard-tissue contrast-based modeling; human tooth; material types distribution; probabilistic approach; proton signal detection; pure phase-encoded MRI; solid-state imaging; solids classification; tissue-classification technique; voxel-sized volume; Biological materials; Humans; Magnetic resonance imaging; Nuclear magnetic resonance; Phase detection; Protons; Solid modeling; Solid state circuits; Spectroscopy; Teeth;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on