Initialization, noise, singularities, and scale in height ridge traversal for tubular object centerline extraction
Top Cited Papers
- 7 August 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
- Vol. 21 (2), 61-75
- https://doi.org/10.1109/42.993126
Abstract
The extraction of the centerlines of tubular objects in two and three-dimensional images is a part of many clinical image analysis tasks. One common approach to tubular object centerline extraction is based on intensity ridge traversal. In this paper, we evaluate the effects of initialization, noise, and singularities on intensity ridge traversal and present multiscale heuristics and optimal-scale measures that minimize these effects. Monte Carlo experiments using simulated and clinical data are used to quantify how these "dynamic-scale" enhancements address clinical needs regarding speed, accuracy, and automation. In particular, we show that dynamic-scale ridge traversal is insensitive to its initial parameter settings, operates with little additional computational overhead, tracks centerlines with subvoxel accuracy, passes branch points, and handles significant image noise. We also illustrate the capabilities of the method for medical applications involving a variety of tubular structures in clinical data from different organs, patients, and imaging modalities.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multiscale Medial analysis of medical imagesPublished by Springer Nature ,2005
- Symbolic description of intracerebral vessels segmented from magnetic resonance angiograms and evaluation by comparison with X-ray angiogramsMedical Image Analysis, 2001
- Penalized-distance volumetric skeleton algorithmIEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, 2001
- Gray-scale skeletonization of small vessels in magnetic resonance angiographyIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 2000
- Model-based quantitation of 3-D magnetic resonance angiographic imagesIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 1999
- Topology adaptive deformable surfaces for medical image volume segmentationIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 1999
- An adaptive segmentation algorithm for time-of-flight MRA dataIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 1999
- Determining X-ray projections for coil treatments of intracranial aneurysmsIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 1999
- Zoom-Invariant Vision of Figural Shape: The Mathematics of CoresComputer Vision and Image Understanding, 1998
- Shape description using weighted symmetric axis featuresPattern Recognition, 1978