
Proceedings Paper
Pulmonary lobe segmentation with level setsFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
---|---|---|
$17.00 | $21.00 |
Paper Abstract
Automatic segmentation of the separate human lung lobes is a crucial task in computer aided diagnostics and
intervention planning, and required for example for determination of disease spreading or pulmonary parenchyma
quantification.
In this work, a novel approach for lobe segmentation based on multi-region level sets is presented. In a first step,
interlobular fissures are detected using a supervised enhancement filter. The fissures are then used to compute
a cost image, which is incorporated in the level set approach. By this, the segmentation is drawn to the fissures
at places where structure information is present in the image. In areas with incomplete fissures (e.g. due to
insufficient image quality or anatomical conditions) the smoothing term of the level sets applies and a closed
continuation of the fissures is provided.
The approach is tested on nine pulmonary CT scans. It is shown that incorporating the additional force term
improves the segmentation significantly. On average, 83% of the left fissure is traced correctly; the right oblique
and horizontal fissures are properly segmented to 76% and 48%, respectively.
Paper Details
Date Published: 14 February 2012
PDF: 8 pages
Proc. SPIE 8314, Medical Imaging 2012: Image Processing, 83142V (14 February 2012); doi: 10.1117/12.911378
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8314:
Medical Imaging 2012: Image Processing
David R. Haynor; Sébastien Ourselin, Editor(s)
PDF: 8 pages
Proc. SPIE 8314, Medical Imaging 2012: Image Processing, 83142V (14 February 2012); doi: 10.1117/12.911378
Show Author Affiliations
Alexander Schmidt-Richberg, Univ. of Lübeck (Germany)
Jan Ehrhardt, Univ. of Lübeck (Germany)
Matthias Wilms, Univ. of Lübeck (Germany)
Jan Ehrhardt, Univ. of Lübeck (Germany)
Matthias Wilms, Univ. of Lübeck (Germany)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8314:
Medical Imaging 2012: Image Processing
David R. Haynor; Sébastien Ourselin, Editor(s)
© SPIE. Terms of Use
