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Digital tomosynthesis of hand joints for arthritis assessment
Author(s) -
Duryea J.,
Dobbins J. T.,
Lynch J. A.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.1543573
Subject(s) - tomosynthesis , radiography , digital radiography , fiducial marker , projection (relational algebra) , medical imaging , medicine , iterative reconstruction , computer science , computer vision , osteoarthritis , computed radiography , nuclear medicine , artificial intelligence , mathematics , radiology , mammography , image quality , algorithm , image (mathematics) , breast cancer , alternative medicine , cancer , pathology
The two principal forms of hand arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and osteoarthritis (OA) have large clinical and economic costs. Radiography has been shown to be a useful tool to assess the condition of the disease. A hand radiograph, however, is a two‐dimensional projection of a three‐dimensional object. In this report we present the results of a study that applied digital tomosynthesis to hand radiography in order to extract three‐dimensional outcome measures that should be more sensitive to arthritis progression. The study was performed using simulated projection radiographs created using micro computed tomography (μCT) and a set of five dry‐bone hand skeletons. These simulated projection images were then reconstructed into tomographic slices using the matrix inversion tomosynthesis (MITS) algorithm. The accuracy of the tomosynthesis reconstruction was evaluated by comparing the reconstructed images to a gold standard created using the μCT data. A parameter from image registration science, normalized mutual information, provided a quantifiable figure of merit. This study examined the effects of source displacement, number of reconstructed planes, number of acquisitions, noise added to the gray scale images, and errors in the location of a fiducial marker. We also optimized the reconstruction as a function of two variables k and α, that controlled the mixing of MITS with conventional shift‐and‐add tomosynthesis. A study using hand delineated joint margins demonstrated that MITS images provided a better measurement of average joint space width. We found good agreement between the MITS slices and the true planes. Both joint margins and trabecular structure were visible and the reconstructed slices showed additional structures not visible with the standard projection image. Using hand‐delineated joint margins we compared the average joint space width of the gold standard slices to the MITS and projection images. A root‐mean square deviation (RMSD), calculated for this comparison, gave RMSD proj= 0 . 18 mm and RMSD MITS= 0 . 14 mm for the projection and MITS images, respectively. We have demonstrated the potential of digital tomosynthesis for imaging of the hand to assess arthritic changes. We have also developed a methodology that can be used to optimize the technique and have studied the issues that will control the feasibility of clinical implementation.