Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Reconstruction of High-Resolution Tongue Volumes From MRI

68

Citations

61

References

2012

Year

Abstract

Magnetic resonance images of the tongue have been used in both clinical studies and scientific research to reveal tongue structure. In order to extract different features of the tongue and its relation to the vocal tract, it is beneficial to acquire three orthogonal image volumes--e.g., axial, sagittal, and coronal volumes. In order to maintain both low noise and high visual detail and minimize the blurred effect due to involuntary motion artifacts, each set of images is acquired with an in-plane resolution that is much better than the through-plane resolution. As a result, any one dataset, by itself, is not ideal for automatic volumetric analyses such as segmentation, registration, and atlas building or even for visualization when oblique slices are required. This paper presents a method of superresolution volume reconstruction of the tongue that generates an isotropic image volume using the three orthogonal image volumes. The method uses preprocessing steps that include registration and intensity matching and a data combination approach with the edge-preserving property carried out by Markov random field optimization. The performance of the proposed method was demonstrated on 15 clinical datasets, preserving anatomical details and yielding superior results when compared with different reconstruction methods as visually and quantitatively assessed.

References

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