scholarly journals Automatic Segmentation of Dental Cone Beam Computed Tomography Image Based on Level Set Method Using Morphology Operators and Polynomial Fitting

Author(s):  
Fahmi Syuhada Syuhada ◽  
Agus Zainal Arifin

Abstract Automatic Segmentation of dental cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) images is challenging due to the intensity of the teeth that have low level intensity. In this paper we proposes a new method for automatic teeth segmentation in slices of CBCT images based on level let method using morphology operators and polynomial fitting. Morphology operators are used to construct the Region of Interest (ROI) area of dental objects in the image slice. ROI is used to focus the analysis process on areas of dental objects which generally have a polynomial pattern distribution. Polynomial fitting is obtained to estimation arc of teeth structure in CBCT images. Level Set is implemented to evolve the ROI to obtain the contours of dental objects. Comparison between proposed method result and the ground truth images shows that the method gives best average accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity value of 99.02%, 95.32%, 99.09%, respectively. This value that the proposed method is promising for accurate segmentation of the entire tooth form on CBCT images.

2020 ◽  
Vol 148 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-279
Author(s):  
Danushka S. Seneviratne ◽  
Austin R. Hadley ◽  
Jennifer L. Peterson ◽  
Timothy D. Malouff ◽  
Ronald Reimer ◽  
...  

Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 2798 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonino Lo Giudice ◽  
Vincenzo Ronsivalle ◽  
Cristina Grippaudo ◽  
Alessandra Lucchese ◽  
Simone Muraglie ◽  
...  

The accuracy of 3D reconstructions of the craniomaxillofacial region using cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) is important for the morphological evaluation of specific anatomical structures. Moreover, an accurate segmentation process is fundamental for the physical reconstruction of the anatomy (3D printing) when a preliminary simulation of the therapy is required. In this regard, the objective of this study is to evaluate the accuracy of four different types of software for the semiautomatic segmentation of the mandibular jaw compared to manual segmentation, used as a gold standard. Twenty cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) with a manual approach (Mimics) and a semi-automatic approach (Invesalius, ITK-Snap, Dolphin 3D, Slicer 3D) were selected for the segmentation of the mandible in the present study. The accuracy of semi-automatic segmentation was evaluated: (1) by comparing the mandibular volumes obtained with semi-automatic 3D rendering and manual segmentation and (2) by deviation analysis between the two mandibular models. An analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to evaluate differences in mandibular volumetric recordings and for a deviation analysis among the different software types used. Linear regression was also performed between manual and semi-automatic methods. No significant differences were found in the total volumes among the obtained 3D mandibular models (Mimics = 40.85 cm3, ITK-Snap = 40.81 cm3, Invesalius = 40.04 cm3, Dolphin 3D = 42.03 cm3, Slicer 3D = 40.58 cm3). High correlations were found between the semi-automatic segmentation and manual segmentation approach, with R coefficients ranging from 0,960 to 0,992. According to the deviation analysis, the mandibular models obtained with ITK-Snap showed the highest matching percentage (Tolerance A = 88.44%, Tolerance B = 97.30%), while those obtained with Dolphin 3D showed the lowest matching percentage (Tolerance A = 60.01%, Tolerance B = 87.76%) (p < 0.05). Colour-coded maps showed that the area of greatest mismatch between semi-automatic and manual segmentation was the condylar region and the region proximate to the dental roots. Despite the fact that the semi-automatic segmentation of the mandible showed, in general, high reliability and high correlation with the manual segmentation, caution should be taken when evaluating the morphological and dimensional characteristics of the condyles either on CBCT-derived digital models or physical models (3D printing).


Author(s):  
Fahmi Syuhada ◽  
Rarasmaya Indraswari ◽  
Agus Zainal Arifin ◽  
Dini Adni Navastara

Segmentation of dental Cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) images based on Boundary Tracking has been widely used in recent decades. Generally, the process only uses axial projection data of CBCT where the slices image that representing the tip of the tooth object have decreased in contrast which impact to difficult to distinguish with background or other elements. In this paper we propose the multi-projection segmentation method by combining the level set segmentation result on three projections to detect the tooth object more optimally. Multiprojection is performed by decomposing CBCT data which produces three projections called axial, sagittal and coronal projections. Then, the segmentation based on the set level method is implemented on the slices image in the three projections. The results of the three projections are combined to get the final result of this method. This proposed method obtains evaluation results of accuracy, sensitivity, specificity with values of 97.18%, 88.62%, and 97.61%, respectively.


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