Definition of Tubular Anatomic Structures from Arbitrary Stereo Lithographic Surface
Other conference contribution, 2017

An accurate description of anatomies and dynamics of vessels is crucial to understand their characteristics and improve surgical techniques, thus it is the basis, in addition to surgeon experience, on which stent design and operation procedures rely. The process of producing this description is user intensive, and recent improvement in image processing of medical3D imaging allows for a more automated workflow. However, there is a need to bridge the gap from a processed geometry to a robust mathematical computational grid. By sequentially segmenting a tubular anatomic structure, here defined by a stereo lithographic (STL) surface, an initial centerline is formed by connecting centroids of orthogonal cross-sectional contours along the length of the structure. Relying on the initial centerline, a set of non-overlapping 2D cross sectional contours are defined along the centerline, a centerline which is updated after the 2D contours are produced. After a second iteration of producing 2D contours and updating the centerline, a full description of the structure is created. Our method for describing vessel geometry shows good coherence to existing method. The main advantages of our method include the possibility of having arbitrary triangulated STL surface input, automated centerline definition, safety against intersecting cross-sectional contours and automatic clean-up of local kinks and wrinkles.

Author

Johan Bondesson

Dynamics

Ga Young Suh

Stanford University

Torbjörn Lundh

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Applied Mathematics and Statistics

Jason T. Lee

Stanford University

Michael D. Dake

Stanford University

Christopher P. Cheng

Stanford University

Engineering Health
Gothenburg, Sweden,

Subject Categories

Medical Engineering

Medical Biotechnology

Areas of Advance

Life Science Engineering (2010-2018)

More information

Latest update

1/29/2021