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3D printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology

Current medical imaging phantoms are usually limited by simplified geometry and radiographic skeletal homogeneity, which confines their usage for image quality assessment. In order to fabricate realistic imaging phantoms, replication of the entire tissue morphology and the associated CT numbers, def...

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Autores principales: Hatamikia, Sepideh, Kronreif, Gernot, Unger, Alexander, Oberoi, Gunpreet, Jaksa, Laszlo, Unger, Ewald, Koschitz, Stefan, Gulyas, Ingo, Irnstorfer, Nikolaus, Buschmann, Martin, Kettenbach, Joachim, Birkfellner, Wolfgang, Lorenz, Andrea
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9948829/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35221154
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.zemedi.2022.02.001
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author Hatamikia, Sepideh
Kronreif, Gernot
Unger, Alexander
Oberoi, Gunpreet
Jaksa, Laszlo
Unger, Ewald
Koschitz, Stefan
Gulyas, Ingo
Irnstorfer, Nikolaus
Buschmann, Martin
Kettenbach, Joachim
Birkfellner, Wolfgang
Lorenz, Andrea
author_facet Hatamikia, Sepideh
Kronreif, Gernot
Unger, Alexander
Oberoi, Gunpreet
Jaksa, Laszlo
Unger, Ewald
Koschitz, Stefan
Gulyas, Ingo
Irnstorfer, Nikolaus
Buschmann, Martin
Kettenbach, Joachim
Birkfellner, Wolfgang
Lorenz, Andrea
author_sort Hatamikia, Sepideh
collection PubMed
description Current medical imaging phantoms are usually limited by simplified geometry and radiographic skeletal homogeneity, which confines their usage for image quality assessment. In order to fabricate realistic imaging phantoms, replication of the entire tissue morphology and the associated CT numbers, defined as Hounsfield Unit (HU) is required. 3D printing is a promising technology for the production of medical imaging phantoms with accurate anatomical replication. So far, the majority of the imaging phantoms using 3D printing technologies tried to mimic the average HU of soft tissue human organs. One important aspect of the anthropomorphic imaging phantoms is also the replication of realistic radiodensities for bone tissues. In this study, we used filament printing technology to develop a CT-derived 3D printed thorax phantom with realistic bone-equivalent radiodensity using only one single commercially available filament. The generated thorax phantom geometry closely resembles a patient and includes direct manufacturing of bone structures while creating life-like heterogeneity within bone tissues. A HU analysis as well as a physical dimensional comparison were performed in order to evaluate the density and geometry agreement between the proposed phantom and the corresponding CT data. With the achieved density range (-482 to 968 HU) we could successfully mimic the realistic radiodensity of the bone marrow as well as the cortical bone for the ribs, vertebral body and dorsal vertebral column in the thorax skeleton. In addition, considering the large radiodensity range achieved a full thorax imaging phantom mimicking also soft tissues can become feasible. The physical dimensional comparison using both Extrema Analysis and Collision Detection methods confirmed a mean surface overlap of 90% and a mean volumetric overlap of 84,56% between the patient and phantom model. Furthermore, the reproducibility analyses revealed a good geometry and radiodensity duplicability in 24 printed cylinder replicas. Thus, according to our results, the proposed additively manufactured anthropomorphic thorax phantom has the potential to be efficiently used for validation of imaging- and radiation-based procedures in precision medicine.
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spelling pubmed-99488292023-02-23 3D printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology Hatamikia, Sepideh Kronreif, Gernot Unger, Alexander Oberoi, Gunpreet Jaksa, Laszlo Unger, Ewald Koschitz, Stefan Gulyas, Ingo Irnstorfer, Nikolaus Buschmann, Martin Kettenbach, Joachim Birkfellner, Wolfgang Lorenz, Andrea Z Med Phys Original Paper Current medical imaging phantoms are usually limited by simplified geometry and radiographic skeletal homogeneity, which confines their usage for image quality assessment. In order to fabricate realistic imaging phantoms, replication of the entire tissue morphology and the associated CT numbers, defined as Hounsfield Unit (HU) is required. 3D printing is a promising technology for the production of medical imaging phantoms with accurate anatomical replication. So far, the majority of the imaging phantoms using 3D printing technologies tried to mimic the average HU of soft tissue human organs. One important aspect of the anthropomorphic imaging phantoms is also the replication of realistic radiodensities for bone tissues. In this study, we used filament printing technology to develop a CT-derived 3D printed thorax phantom with realistic bone-equivalent radiodensity using only one single commercially available filament. The generated thorax phantom geometry closely resembles a patient and includes direct manufacturing of bone structures while creating life-like heterogeneity within bone tissues. A HU analysis as well as a physical dimensional comparison were performed in order to evaluate the density and geometry agreement between the proposed phantom and the corresponding CT data. With the achieved density range (-482 to 968 HU) we could successfully mimic the realistic radiodensity of the bone marrow as well as the cortical bone for the ribs, vertebral body and dorsal vertebral column in the thorax skeleton. In addition, considering the large radiodensity range achieved a full thorax imaging phantom mimicking also soft tissues can become feasible. The physical dimensional comparison using both Extrema Analysis and Collision Detection methods confirmed a mean surface overlap of 90% and a mean volumetric overlap of 84,56% between the patient and phantom model. Furthermore, the reproducibility analyses revealed a good geometry and radiodensity duplicability in 24 printed cylinder replicas. Thus, according to our results, the proposed additively manufactured anthropomorphic thorax phantom has the potential to be efficiently used for validation of imaging- and radiation-based procedures in precision medicine. Elsevier 2022-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC9948829/ /pubmed/35221154 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.zemedi.2022.02.001 Text en © 2022 Published by Elsevier GmbH on behalf of DGMP, ÖGMP and SSRMP. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Paper
Hatamikia, Sepideh
Kronreif, Gernot
Unger, Alexander
Oberoi, Gunpreet
Jaksa, Laszlo
Unger, Ewald
Koschitz, Stefan
Gulyas, Ingo
Irnstorfer, Nikolaus
Buschmann, Martin
Kettenbach, Joachim
Birkfellner, Wolfgang
Lorenz, Andrea
3D printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology
title 3D printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology
title_full 3D printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology
title_fullStr 3D printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology
title_full_unstemmed 3D printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology
title_short 3D printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology
title_sort 3d printed patient-specific thorax phantom with realistic heterogenous bone radiopacity using filament printer technology
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9948829/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35221154
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.zemedi.2022.02.001
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