Reconstruction of 3D lumbar spine models from incomplete segmentations using landmark detection
Lara Blomenkamp, Ivanna Kramer, Sabine Bauer, Kevin Weirauch and, Dietrich Paulus

TL;DR
This paper introduces a fast, accurate method for reconstructing complete 3D lumbar spine models from incomplete MRI segmentations by automatically detecting landmarks and applying affine transformations, aiding clinical spinal applications.
Contribution
The novel approach uses landmark detection and affine transformations to reconstruct full spine models efficiently from incomplete data, improving accuracy and speed over existing methods.
Findings
Average point-to-model distance of 1.95 mm
Mean absolute error of 3.4° in FSU angles
Reconstruction time of 0.14 seconds
Abstract
Patient-specific 3D spine models serve as a foundation for spinal treatment and surgery planning as well as analysis of loading conditions in biomechanical and biomedical research. Despite advancements in imaging technologies, the reconstruction of complete 3D spine models often faces challenges due to limitations in imaging modalities such as planar X-Ray and missing certain spinal structures, such as the spinal or transverse processes, in volumetric medical images and resulting segmentations. In this study, we present a novel accurate and time-efficient method to reconstruct complete 3D lumbar spine models from incomplete 3D vertebral bodies obtained from segmented magnetic resonance images (MRI). In our method, we use an affine transformation to align artificial vertebra models with patient-specific incomplete vertebrae. The transformation matrix is derived from vertebra landmarks,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Imaging and Analysis · Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology · Anatomy and Medical Technology
MethodsALIGN
