Landmark constellation models for medical image content identification and localization.

Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg

Philips Research, Röntgenstraße 24-26, 22335, Hamburg, Germany.

Published: July 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study addresses the challenges of detecting and localizing anatomical landmarks in medical imaging, noting that existing methods may not always ensure robust localization across varied conditions.
  • A new method was developed that combines results from multiple landmarks to enhance accuracy and calculate confidence measures, utilizing a constellation model to track landmark variability.
  • The method showed promising results, successfully identifying target regions in trauma CT scans and initializing segmentations in 96% of cases.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Many medical imaging tasks require the detection and localization of anatomical landmarks, for example for the initialization of model-based segmentation or to detect anatomical regions present in an image. A large number of landmark and object localization methods have been described in the literature. The detection of single landmarks may be insufficient to achieve robust localization across a variety of imaging settings and subjects. Furthermore, methods like the generalized Hough transform yield the most likely location of an object, but not an indication whether or not the landmark was actually present in the image.

Methods: For these reasons, we developed a simple and computationally efficient method combining localization results from multiple landmarks to achieve robust localization and to compute a localization confidence measure. For each anatomical region, we train a constellation model indicating the mean relative locations and location variability of a set of landmarks. This model is registered to the landmarks detected in a test image via point-based registration, using closed-form solutions. Three different outlier suppression schemes are compared, two using iterative re-weighting based on the residual landmark registration errors and the third being a variant of RANSAC. The mean weighted residual registration error serves as a confidence measure to distinguish true from false localization results. The method is optimized and evaluated on synthetic data, evaluating both the localization accuracy and the ability to classify good from bad registration results based on the residual registration error.

Results: Two application examples are presented: the identification of the imaged anatomical region in trauma CT scans and the initialization of model-based segmentation for C-arm CT scans with different target regions. The identification of the target region with the presented method was in 96 % of the cases correct.

Conclusion: The presented method is a simple solution for combining multiple landmark localization results. With appropriate parameters, outlier suppression clearly improves the localization performance over model registration without outlier suppression. The optimum choice of method and parameters depends on the expected level of noise and outliers in the application at hand, as well as on the focus on localization, classification, or both. The method allows detecting and localizing anatomical fields of view in medical images and is well suited to support a wide range of applications comprising image content identification, anatomical navigation and visualization, or initializing the pose of organ shape models.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11548-015-1328-5DOI Listing

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