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Virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans

In the clinical field of diagnosis and monitoring of bone diseases, high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) is an important imaging modality. It provides a resolution where quantitative bone morphometry can be extracted in vivo on patients. It is known that HR-pQCT prov...

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Autores principales: Schulte, Friederike A., Christen, Patrik, Badilatti, Sandro D., Parkinson, Ian, Khosla, Sundeep, Goldhahn, Jörg, Müller, Ralph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6373954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30759159
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212280
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author Schulte, Friederike A.
Christen, Patrik
Badilatti, Sandro D.
Parkinson, Ian
Khosla, Sundeep
Goldhahn, Jörg
Müller, Ralph
author_facet Schulte, Friederike A.
Christen, Patrik
Badilatti, Sandro D.
Parkinson, Ian
Khosla, Sundeep
Goldhahn, Jörg
Müller, Ralph
author_sort Schulte, Friederike A.
collection PubMed
description In the clinical field of diagnosis and monitoring of bone diseases, high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) is an important imaging modality. It provides a resolution where quantitative bone morphometry can be extracted in vivo on patients. It is known that HR-pQCT provides slight differences in morphometric indices compared to the current standard approach micro-computed tomography (micro-CT). The most obvious reason for this is the restriction of the radiation dose and with this a lower image resolution. With advances in micro-CT evaluation techniques such as patient-specific remodeling simulations or dynamic bone morphometry, a higher image resolution would potentially also allow the application of such novel evaluation techniques to clinical HR-pQCT measurements. Virtual supersampling as post-processing step was considered to increase the image resolution of HR-pQCT scans. The hypothesis was that this technique preserves the structural bone morphometry. Supersampling from 82 μm to virtual 41 μm by trilinear interpolation of the grayscale values of 42 human cadaveric forearms resulted in strong correlations of structural parameters (R(2): 0.96–1.00). BV/TV was slightly overestimated (4.3%, R(2): 1.00) compared to the HR-pQCT resolution. Tb.N was overestimated (7.47%; R(2): 0.99) and Tb.Th was slightly underestimated (-4.20%; R(2): 0.98). The technique was reproducible with PE(%CV) between 1.96% (SMI) and 7.88% (Conn.D). In a clinical setting with 205 human forearms with or without fracture measured at 82 μm resolution HR-pQCT, the technique was sensitive to changes between groups in all parameters (p < 0.05) except trabecular thickness. In conclusion, we demonstrated that supersampling preserves the bone morphometry from HR-pQCT scans and is reproducible and sensitive to changes between groups. Supersampling can be used to investigate on the resolution dependency of HR-pQCT images and gain more insight into this imaging modality.
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spelling pubmed-63739542019-03-01 Virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans Schulte, Friederike A. Christen, Patrik Badilatti, Sandro D. Parkinson, Ian Khosla, Sundeep Goldhahn, Jörg Müller, Ralph PLoS One Research Article In the clinical field of diagnosis and monitoring of bone diseases, high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) is an important imaging modality. It provides a resolution where quantitative bone morphometry can be extracted in vivo on patients. It is known that HR-pQCT provides slight differences in morphometric indices compared to the current standard approach micro-computed tomography (micro-CT). The most obvious reason for this is the restriction of the radiation dose and with this a lower image resolution. With advances in micro-CT evaluation techniques such as patient-specific remodeling simulations or dynamic bone morphometry, a higher image resolution would potentially also allow the application of such novel evaluation techniques to clinical HR-pQCT measurements. Virtual supersampling as post-processing step was considered to increase the image resolution of HR-pQCT scans. The hypothesis was that this technique preserves the structural bone morphometry. Supersampling from 82 μm to virtual 41 μm by trilinear interpolation of the grayscale values of 42 human cadaveric forearms resulted in strong correlations of structural parameters (R(2): 0.96–1.00). BV/TV was slightly overestimated (4.3%, R(2): 1.00) compared to the HR-pQCT resolution. Tb.N was overestimated (7.47%; R(2): 0.99) and Tb.Th was slightly underestimated (-4.20%; R(2): 0.98). The technique was reproducible with PE(%CV) between 1.96% (SMI) and 7.88% (Conn.D). In a clinical setting with 205 human forearms with or without fracture measured at 82 μm resolution HR-pQCT, the technique was sensitive to changes between groups in all parameters (p < 0.05) except trabecular thickness. In conclusion, we demonstrated that supersampling preserves the bone morphometry from HR-pQCT scans and is reproducible and sensitive to changes between groups. Supersampling can be used to investigate on the resolution dependency of HR-pQCT images and gain more insight into this imaging modality. Public Library of Science 2019-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6373954/ /pubmed/30759159 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212280 Text en © 2019 Schulte et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Schulte, Friederike A.
Christen, Patrik
Badilatti, Sandro D.
Parkinson, Ian
Khosla, Sundeep
Goldhahn, Jörg
Müller, Ralph
Virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans
title Virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans
title_full Virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans
title_fullStr Virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans
title_full_unstemmed Virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans
title_short Virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans
title_sort virtual supersampling as post-processing step preserves the trabecular bone morphometry in human peripheral quantitative computed tomography scans
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6373954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30759159
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212280
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