V. Burdin et al., MODELING AND ANALYSIS OF 3-D ELONGATED SHAPES WITH APPLICATIONS TO LONG-BONE MORPHOMETRY, IEEE transactions on medical imaging, 15(1), 1996, pp. 79-91
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Biomedical","Radiology,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
This paper presents a geometric model to be used as a framework for th
e description and analysis of three-dimensional (3-D) elongated shapes
, Elongated shapes can be decomposed into two different parts: a 3-D c
urve (the central axis) and a 3-D surface (the straight surface), The
central axis is described in terms of curvature and torsion. A novel c
oncept of torsion image is introduced which allows the user to study t
he torsion of some relevant 3-D structures such as the medulla of long
bones, without computing the third derivative, The description of the
straight surface is based on an ordered set of Fourier Descriptors (F
D's), each set representing a 2-D slice of the structure, These descri
ptors possess completeness, continuity, and stability properties, and
some geometrical invariancies. A polar diagram is built which contains
the anatomical information of the straight surface and can be used as
a tool for the analysis and discrimination of 3-D structures. A techn
ique for the reconstruction of the 3-D surface from the model's two co
mponents is presented, Various applications to the analysis of long bo
ne structures, such as the ulna and radius, are derived from the model
, namely, data compression, comparison of 3-D shapes, segmentation int
o 3-D primitives, and torsion and curvature analysis, The relevance of
the method to morphometry and to clinical applications is discussed.