An Efficient Region Precise Thresholding and Direct Hough Transform in Femur and Femoral Neck Segmentation Using Pelvis CT

This study proposed a fully-automated method for the segmentation of the femur and femoral neck in volumetric computed tomography (CT) images for the evaluation of osteoporotic fractures with severe abnormalities. We evaluated the proposed method on pelvis CT image of 30 patients for both the left a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE access Vol. 8; pp. 110048 - 110058
Main Authors Yun, Young-Ji, Ahn, Byeong-Cheol, Kavitha, Muthu Subash, Chien, Sung-Il
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Piscataway IEEE 2020
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:This study proposed a fully-automated method for the segmentation of the femur and femoral neck in volumetric computed tomography (CT) images for the evaluation of osteoporotic fractures with severe abnormalities. We evaluated the proposed method on pelvis CT image of 30 patients for both the left and right sides. The proposed framework consists of three components: (1) localization of the acetabulum from the femoral head by tracing the intensity and adjacent neighbors of bone pixels, (2) segmentation and enhancement of the femur from its surrounding tissue using multi-level thresholding with filtering techniques, and (3) extraction of femoral neck contours using a directed Hough transform with oriented contour-filling techniques. The quality of the proposed femur segmentation performance was compared with the segmentation results using an edge-based active contour model (ACM), active shape model (ASM) and ground truth including average precision, recall, false-positive rate ( FPR ), false-negative rate ( FNR ), and the Dice similarity coefficient ( DSC ). The proposed method showed error of less than 1% for femur segmentation. A highly satisfactory similarity agreement was achieved between automated and manual methods, with a DSC greater than 94.8-exceeding those of semi-automated segmentations of the femur. Quantitative and qualitative experimental results indicated that the proposed fully-automated approach was capable of accurately segmenting the femur and femoral neck, which suggests the possibility of reducing insignificant contours of bone structures for further assessment of risk for osteoporotic fractures.
ISSN:2169-3536
2169-3536
DOI:10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3001578