Preliminary evaluation of a prototype stereoscopic a-Si:H–based X-ray imaging system for full-field digital mammography

Author(s):  
D.G Darambara ◽  
R.D Speller ◽  
J.A Horrocks ◽  
S Godber ◽  
R Wilson ◽  
...  
Radiology ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 262 (3) ◽  
pp. 788-796 ◽  
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Matthew G. Wallis ◽  
Elin Moa ◽  
Federica Zanca ◽  
Karin Leifland ◽  
Mats Danielsson

2006 ◽  
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Madhusmita Behera

PLoS ONE ◽  
2013 ◽  
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pp. e70660 ◽  
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Michael Brand ◽  
Ina-Kristin Schlude ◽  
Wolfgang Wuest ◽  
Martina Meier-Meitinger ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
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Samuli Siltanen

2005 ◽  
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Jasjit Suri ◽  
Yujun Guo ◽  
Cara Coad ◽  
Tim Danielson ◽  
Idris Elbakri ◽  
...  

Fischer has been developing a fused full-field digital mammography and ultrasound (FFDMUS) system funded by the National Institute of Health (NIH). In FFDMUS, two sets of acquisitions are performed: 2-D X-ray and 3-D ultrasound. The segmentation of acquired lesions in phantom images is important: (i) to assess the image quality of X-ray and ultrasound images; (ii) to register multi-modality images; and (iii) to establish an automatic lesion detection methodology to assist the radiologist. In this paper we developed lesion segmentation strategies for ultrasound and X-ray images acquired using FFDMUS. For ultrasound lesion segmentation, a signal-to-noise (SNR)-based method was adapted. For X-ray segmentation, we used gradient vector flow (GVF)-based deformable model. The performance of these segmentation algorithms was evaluated. We also performed partial volume correction (PVC) analysis on the segmentation of ultrasound images. For X-ray lesion segmentation, we also studied the effect of PDE smoothing on GVF's ability to segment the lesion. We conclude that ultrasound image qualities from FFDMUS and Hand-Held ultrasound (HHUS) are comparable. The mean percentage error with PVC was 4.56% (4.31%) and 6.63% (5.89%) for 5 mm lesion and 3 mm lesion respectively. The mean average error from the segmented X-ray images with PDE yielded an average error of 9.61%. We also tested our program on synthetic datasets. The system was developed for Linux workstation using C/C++.


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