Publication | Closed Access
Automatic Detection and Measurement of Spinous Process Curve on Clinical Ultrasound Spine Images
33
Citations
34
References
2020
Year
Computed TomographySpinous Process CurveMedical UltrasoundEngineeringProxy Cobb AngleDiagnosisBiomedical EngineeringAnatomyOrthopaedic SurgeryDiagnostic ImagingMagnetic Resonance ImagingImage AnalysisApplied AnatomyCt ScanVascular ImagingRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingImaging AnatomyMedical ImagingMusculoskeletal ImagingUltrasoundMedical Image ComputingImaging TechniqueBiomedical ImagingElastographyUs Imaging TechniqueMedicineMedical Image AnalysisAutomatic Detection
The ultrasound (US) imaging technique has been applied to scoliosis assessment, and the proxy Cobb angle can be acquired on the US coronal images. The spinous process angle (SPA) is a valuable parameter to indicate 3-D deformity of spine. However, the SPA cannot be measured on US images since the spinous process (SP) is merged in the soft tissue layer and impossible to be identified on the coronal view directly. A new method based on the gradient vector flow (GVF) snake model was proposed to automatically locate SP position on the US transverse images, and the density-based spatial clustering of application with noise (DBSCAN) was used to remove the outliers out of the detected location results. With marking the SP points on the US coronal image, the SP curve was interpolated and the SPA was measured. The algorithm was evaluated on 50 subjects with various severity of scoliosis, and two raters measured the SPA on both US images and radiographs manually. The mean absolute differences (MADs) of SPAs obtained from the two modalities were 3.4° ± 2.4° and 3.6° ± 2.8° for the two raters, respectively, which were less than the clinical acceptance error (5°), and the results reported a good linear correlation ( ) between the US method and radiography. It indicates that the proposed method can be a promising approach for SPA measurement using the US imaging technique.
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