Colman Kerri L, Dobbe Johannes G G, Stull Kyra E, Ruijter Jan M, Oostra Roelof-Jan, van Rijn Rick R, van der Merwe Alie E, de Boer Hans H, Streekstra Geert J
Department of Medical Biology, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, P.O. Box 22660, 1100 DD, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, P.O. Box 22660, 1100 DD, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Int J Legal Med. 2017 Jul;131(4):1155-1163. doi: 10.1007/s00414-017-1548-z. Epub 2017 Feb 10.
Almost all European countries lack contemporary skeletal collections for the development and validation of forensic anthropological methods. Furthermore, legal, ethical and practical considerations hinder the development of skeletal collections. A virtual skeletal database derived from clinical computed tomography (CT) scans provides a potential solution. However, clinical CT scans are typically generated with varying settings. This study investigates the effects of image segmentation and varying imaging conditions on the precision of virtual modelled pelves. An adult human cadaver was scanned using varying imaging conditions, such as scanner type and standard patient scanning protocol, slice thickness and exposure level. The pelvis was segmented from the various CT images resulting in virtually modelled pelves. The precision of the virtual modelling was determined per polygon mesh point. The fraction of mesh points resulting in point-to-point distance variations of 2 mm or less (95% confidence interval (CI)) was reported. Colour mapping was used to visualise modelling variability. At almost all (>97%) locations across the pelvis, the point-to-point distance variation is less than 2 mm (CI = 95%). In >91% of the locations, the point-to-point distance variation was less than 1 mm (CI = 95%). This indicates that the geometric variability of the virtual pelvis as a result of segmentation and imaging conditions rarely exceeds the generally accepted linear error of 2 mm. Colour mapping shows that areas with large variability are predominantly joint surfaces. Therefore, results indicate that segmented bone elements from patient-derived CT scans are a sufficiently precise source for creating a virtual skeletal database.
几乎所有欧洲国家都缺乏用于法医人类学方法开发和验证的当代骨骼标本。此外,法律、伦理和实际考虑因素阻碍了骨骼标本的开发。源自临床计算机断层扫描(CT)的虚拟骨骼数据库提供了一种潜在的解决方案。然而,临床CT扫描通常是在不同的设置下生成的。本研究调查了图像分割和不同成像条件对虚拟建模骨盆精度的影响。使用不同的成像条件对一具成年人体尸体进行扫描,如扫描仪类型、标准患者扫描协议、切片厚度和曝光水平。从各种CT图像中分割出骨盆,从而得到虚拟建模的骨盆。根据多边形网格点确定虚拟建模的精度。报告了导致点对点距离变化在2毫米或更小(95%置信区间(CI))的网格点比例。使用颜色映射来可视化建模的变异性。在骨盆几乎所有(>97%)的位置,点对点距离变化小于2毫米(CI = 95%)。在>91%的位置,点对点距离变化小于1毫米(CI = 95%)。这表明由于分割和成像条件导致的虚拟骨盆几何变异性很少超过普遍接受的2毫米线性误差。颜色映射显示,变异性大的区域主要是关节表面。因此,结果表明,从患者来源的CT扫描中分割出的骨骼元素是创建虚拟骨骼数据库的一个足够精确的来源。