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Department of Robotics and Mechatronics Engineering
Surgical Robotics & Augmented Reality Lab
1. Journal Articles
A shape-partitioned statistical shape model for highly deformed femurs using X-ray images
Chien, Jongho
;
Ha, Ho-Gun
;
Lee, Seongpung
;
Hong, Jaesung
Department of Robotics and Mechatronics Engineering
Surgical Robotics & Augmented Reality Lab
1. Journal Articles
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Title
A shape-partitioned statistical shape model for highly deformed femurs using X-ray images
Issued Date
2022-12
Citation
Chien, Jongho. (2022-12). A shape-partitioned statistical shape model for highly deformed femurs using X-ray images. Computer Assisted Surgery, 27(1), 50–62. doi: 10.1080/24699322.2022.2083016
Type
Article
Author Keywords
3D reconstruction
;
femur modeling
;
Statistical shape model
Keywords
PROXIMAL FEMUR
;
RECONSTRUCTION
;
SEGMENTATION
;
REGISTRATION
ISSN
2469-9322
Abstract
To develop a patient-specific 3 D reconstruction of a femur modeled using the statistical shape model (SSM) and X-ray images, it is assumed that the target shape is not outside the range of variations allowed by the SSM built from a training dataset. We propose the shape-partitioned statistical shape model (SPSSM) to cover significant variations in the target shape. This model can divide a shape into several segments of anatomical interest. We break up the eigenvector matrix into the corresponding representative matrices for the SPSSM by preserving the relevant rows of the original matrix without segmenting the shape and building an independent SSM for each segment. To quantify the reconstruction error of the proposed method, we generated two groups of deformation models of the femur which cannot be easily represented by the conventional SSM. One group of femurs had an anteversion angle deformation, and the other group of femurs had two different scales of the femoral head. Each experiment was performed using the leave-one-out method for twelve femurs. When the femoral head was rotated by 30°, the average reconstruction error of the conventional SSM was 5.34 mm, which was reduced to 3.82 mm for the proposed SPSSM. When the femoral head size was decreased by 20%, the average reconstruction error of the SSM was 4.70 mm, which was reduced to 3.56 mm for the SPSSM. When the femoral head size was increased by 20%, the average reconstruction error of the SSM was 4.28 mm, which was reduced to 3.10 mm for the SPSSM. The experimental results for the two groups of deformation models showed that the proposed SPSSM outperformed the conventional SSM. © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/17154
DOI
10.1080/24699322.2022.2083016
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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