OPAL Workflow: Model Generation Tricia Pang February 10, 2009
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Overview Motivation OPAL Approach 5-Stage OPAL Workflow Challenges Future directions
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Motivation ArtiSynth [1]: 3D Biomechanical Modeling Toolkit Ideally: Model derived from single subject source High resolution model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Motivation Obstructed sleep apnea (OSA) disorder Caused by collapse of soft tissue walls in airway Ideally: Ability to run patient- specific simulations to help diagnosis Quick and accurate method of generating model Credit: Wikipedia
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb OPAL Project Dynamic Modeling of the Oral, Pharyngeal and Laryngeal (OPAL) Complex for Biomedical Engineering Patient-specific modeling and model simulation for study of OSA Tools for clinician use in segmenting image and importing to ArtiSynth Come up with protocol, tools/techniques and modifications needed for end-to-end process
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb OPAL Project 3D Medical DataBiomechanical Model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Workflow Stages 1. Imaging 2. Image processing & reconstruction 3. Reference model generation 4. Patient-specific model fitting 5. Biomechanical model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Workflow Stages 1. Imaging 2. Image processing & reconstruction 3. Reference model generation 4. Patient-specific model fitting 5. Biomechanical model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Stage 1: Imaging Structures Tongue Soft palate Hard palate Epiglottis Pharyngeal wall Airway Jaw Teeth
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Data Source MRI Credit: Klearway, Inc. Dental Appliance w/ Markers Cone CT of Dental Cast Other: laser scans, planar/full CT scans, tagged MRI, ultrasound, fluoroscopy, cadaver data…
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb MRI & Protocol Normal subject vs. OSA patients Control vs. treatment (appliance)
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Workflow Stages 1. Imaging 2. Image processing & reconstruction 3. Reference model generation 4. Patient-specific model fitting 5. Biomechanical model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Stage 2: Image processing & Reconstruction N3 correction [2] (Non-parametric non-uniform intensity normalization) Cropping Cubic interpolation Image registration & reconstruction (Bruno’s work) Combining 3 data sets → high-quality data set
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Workflow Stages 1. Imaging 2. Image processing & reconstruction 3. Reference model generation 4. Patient-specific model fitting 5. Biomechanical model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Stage 3: Reference Model Generation Goal: High quality model Focus on bottom-up semi-automatic segmentation approaches eg. Livewire [3]
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb D Livewire Seed points (forming contours) drawn in 2 orthogonal slice directions, and seed points automatically generated in third slice direction
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Livewire Model Refinement Morphological operations Contour smoothening (active contours [4]) 3D surface reconstruction (non-parallel curve networks [5]) (Claudine & Tanaya)
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Workflow Stages 1. Imaging 2. Image processing & reconstruction 3. Reference model generation 4. Patient-specific model fitting 5. Biomechanical model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Stage 4: Patient-Specific Model Generation Goal: Accurate model, generated with minimal user interaction Focus on top-down or automated approaches Morphological warping operations Deformable model crawlers
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Thin-Plate Spline Warping Thin-plate spline (TPS) deformation [6]: interpolating surfaces over a set of landmarks based on linear and affine-free local deformation Reference Model Warp Result Warp field
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb TPS Warping, Phase 1 Patient MRI Reference Model List of corresponding points User selects a point on both patient MRI and reference model Hard to pinpoint landmarks on 3D model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb TPS Warping, Phase 2 Reference MRI (has a pre-built 3D model) Patient MRI Predefined landmarks shown on reference MRI, user selects equivalent point on patient MRI Can be improved by automated point-matching
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Chan-Vese Active Contours Highly automated method Combine 2D segmentation of axial slices in Matlab User-indicated start point Iterate sequentially using previous segmentation as starting contour for Chan- Vese active contours [7] Livewire 3D (~2 hours) Livewire + post processing Automated AC on axial (2 minutes)
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Deformable Organism Crawler Automatically segment airway by growing a tubular organism, guided by image data and a priori anatomical knowledge Developed in I-DO toolkit [8] Advantages: Analysis and labeling capabilities Ability to incorporate shape-based prior knowledge Modular hierarchical development framework
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Workflow Stages 1. Imaging 2. Image processing & reconstruction 3. Reference model generation 4. Patient-specific model fitting 5. Biomechanical model
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Stage 5: Biomechanical Model Import surface mesh into ArtiSynth Work in progress Challenges: Determining “rest” position from inverse modeling Defining interior nodes and muscle end points
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Challenges in Segmentation Medical image data quality Bottom-up methods: Need for general procedure and abstraction from anatomy being segmented Top-down methods: Need good atlas model Validation with gold standard segmentation
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Future Directions in Segmentation Deformable organism crawler Automated morphing of reference model into patient model Additions to Livewire Oblique slices Sub-pixel resolution Convert to graphics implementation Add smoothness by regularization (eg. by spline, a priori model, …)
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb Thank you! Questions?
OPAL Workflow, 10 Feb References [1] Fels, S., Vogt, F., van den Doel, K., Lloyd, J., Stavness, I., and Vatikiotis-Bateson, E. Developing Physically-Based, Dynamic Vocal Tract Models using ArtiSynth. Proc. Int. Seminar Speech Production (2006), [2] Sled, G., Zijdenbos, A. P., and Evans, A. C. Non-parametric method for automatic correction of intensity nonuniformity in MRI data. IEEE Trans. in Medical Imaging 17, 1 (1998), [3] Poon, M., Hamarneh, G., and Abugharbieh, R. Effcient interactive 3d livewire segmentation of complex objects with arbitrary topology. Comput. Med Imaging and Graphics (2009), in press. [4] Hamarneh, G., Chodorowski, A., and Gustavsson, T. Active Contour Models: Application to Oral Lesion Detection in Color Images. IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics 4 (2000), [5] Liu, L., Bajaj, C., Deasy, J. O., Low, D. A., and Ju, T. Surface reconstruction from non-parallel curve networks. Eurographics 27, 2 (2008), [6] Bookstein, F. L. Principal Warps: Thin-Plate Splines and the Decomposition of Deformations. IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence 11, 6 (1989), [7] Chan, T., and Vese, L. Active contours without edges. IEEE Transactions on Image Processing 10, 2 (2001), [8] McIntosh, C. and Hamarneh, G. I-DO: A “Deformable Organisms” framework for ITK. Medical Image Analysis Lab, SFU. Release 0.50.