Paul Segars W, Tsui Benjamin M W
Carl E. Ravin Advanced Imaging Laboratories, Department of Radiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27706 USA (
Division of Medical Imaging Physics, The Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA (
Proc IEEE Inst Electr Electron Eng. 2009 Dec;97(12):1954-1968. doi: 10.1109/JPROC.2009.2022417.
Recent work in the development of computerized phantoms has focused on the creation of ideal "hybrid" models that seek to combine the realism of a patient-based voxelized phantom with the flexibility of a mathematical or stylized phantom. We have been leading the development of such computerized phantoms for use in medical imaging research. This paper will summarize our developments dating from the original four-dimensional (4-D) Mathematical Cardiac-Torso (MCAT) phantom, a stylized model based on geometric primitives, to the current 4-D extended Cardiac-Torso (XCAT) and Mouse Whole-Body (MOBY) phantoms, hybrid models of the human and laboratory mouse based on state-of-the-art computer graphics techniques. This paper illustrates the evolution of computerized phantoms toward more accurate models of anatomy and physiology. This evolution was catalyzed through the introduction of nonuniform rational b-spline (NURBS) and subdivision (SD) surfaces, tools widely used in computer graphics, as modeling primitives to define a more ideal hybrid phantom. With NURBS and SD surfaces as a basis, we progressed from a simple geometrically based model of the male torso (MCAT) containing only a handful of structures to detailed, whole-body models of the male and female (XCAT) anatomies (at different ages from newborn to adult), each containing more than 9000 structures. The techniques we applied for modeling the human body were similarly used in the creation of the 4-D MOBY phantom, a whole-body model for the mouse designed for small animal imaging research. From our work, we have found the NURBS and SD surface modeling techniques to be an efficient and flexible way to describe the anatomy and physiology for realistic phantoms. Based on imaging data, the surfaces can accurately model the complex organs and structures in the body, providing a level of realism comparable to that of a voxelized phantom. In addition, they are very flexible. Like stylized models, they can easily be manipulated to model anatomical variations and patient motion. With the vast improvement in realism, the phantoms developed in our lab can be combined with accurate models of the imaging process (SPECT, PET, CT, magnetic resonance imaging, and ultrasound) to generate simulated imaging data close to that from actual human or animal subjects. As such, they can provide vital tools to generate predictive imaging data from many different subjects under various scanning parameters from which to quantitatively evaluate and improve imaging devices and techniques. From the MCAT to XCAT, we will demonstrate how NURBS and SD surface modeling have resulted in a major evolutionary advance in the development of computerized phantoms for imaging research.
近期计算机化体模开发工作聚焦于创建理想的“混合”模型,旨在将基于患者的体素化体模的逼真性与数学或风格化体模的灵活性相结合。我们一直引领此类计算机化体模的开发,用于医学成像研究。本文将总结我们从最初的四维(4-D)数学心脏-躯干(MCAT)体模(一个基于几何基元的风格化模型)到当前的4-D扩展心脏-躯干(XCAT)和小鼠全身(MOBY)体模(基于先进计算机图形技术的人类和实验小鼠混合模型)的开发历程。本文阐述了计算机化体模朝着更精确的解剖学和生理学模型的演变。通过引入非均匀有理B样条(NURBS)和细分(SD)曲面(计算机图形学中广泛使用的工具)作为建模基元来定义更理想的混合体模,推动了这一演变。以NURBS和SD曲面为基础,我们从一个仅包含少数结构的基于简单几何形状的男性躯干模型(MCAT)发展到男性和女性(XCAT)详细的全身解剖模型(涵盖从新生儿到成人的不同年龄阶段),每个模型包含超过9000个结构。我们用于人体建模的技术同样应用于4-D MOBY体模的创建,它是一个为小动物成像研究设计的小鼠全身模型。从我们的工作中,我们发现NURBS和SD曲面建模技术是描述逼真体模的解剖学和生理学的一种高效且灵活的方式。基于成像数据,这些曲面能够精确地对体内复杂器官和结构进行建模,提供与体素化体模相当的逼真度。此外,它们非常灵活。如同风格化模型一样,它们可以轻松地进行操作,以模拟解剖变异和患者运动。随着逼真度的大幅提升,我们实验室开发的体模可以与成像过程(单光子发射计算机断层扫描、正电子发射断层扫描、计算机断层扫描、磁共振成像和超声)的精确模型相结合,生成接近实际人类或动物受试者的模拟成像数据。因此,它们可以提供重要工具,在各种扫描参数下从许多不同受试者生成预测性成像数据,以便定量评估和改进成像设备及技术。从MCAT到XCAT,我们将展示NURBS和SD曲面建模如何在用于成像研究的计算机化体模开发中带来重大的进化进展。