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Towards automatic computer‐aided knee surgery by innovative methods for processing the femur surface model
Author(s) -
Cerveri Pietro,
Marchente Mario,
Bartels Ward,
Corten Kristoff,
Simon JeanPierre,
Manzotti Alfonso
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
the international journal of medical robotics and computer assisted surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.556
H-Index - 53
eISSN - 1478-596X
pISSN - 1478-5951
DOI - 10.1002/rcs.345
Subject(s) - condyle , femur , cadaver , ellipse , repeatability , cadaveric spasm , computer science , orientation (vector space) , image processing , surface (topology) , degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry) , femoral condyle , artificial intelligence , anatomy , orthodontics , biomedical engineering , mathematics , computer vision , geometry , medicine , surgery , physics , image (mathematics) , statistics , cartilage , quantum mechanics
Background The femoral shaft (FDA) and transepicondylar (TA), anterior–posterior (WL) and posterior condylar (PCL) axes are fundamental quantities in planning knee arthroplasty surgery. As an alternative to the TA, we introduce the anatomical flexion axis (AFA). Obtaining such axes from image data without any manual supervision remains a practical objective. We propose a novel method that automatically computes the axes of the distal femur by processing the femur mesh surface. Methods Surface data were processed by exploiting specific geometric, anatomical and functional properties. Robust ellipse fitting of the two‐dimensional (2D) condylar profiles was utilized to determine the AFA alternative to the TA. The repeatability of the method was tested upon 20 femur surfaces reconstructed from CT scans taken on cadavers. Results At the highest surface resolutions, the relative median error in the direction of the FDA, AFA, PCL, WL and TA was < 0.50°, 1.20°, 1.0°, 1.30° and 1.50°, respectively. As expected, at the lowest surface resolution, the repeatability decreased to 1.20°, 2.70°, 3.30°, 3.0° and 4.70°, respectively. The computed directions of the FDA, PCL, WL and TA were in agreement (0.60°, 1.55°, 1.90°, 2.40°) with the corresponding reference parameters manually identified in the original CT images by medical experts and with the literature. Conclusions The proposed method proved that: (a) the AFA can be robustly computed by a geometrical analysis of the posterior profiles of the two condyles and can be considered a useful alternative to the TA; (b) higher surface resolutions leads to higher repeatability of all computed quantities; (c) the TA is less repeatable than the other axes. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.