In Proceedings of MICCAI (2)

Computed Cleansing for Virtual Colonoscopy Using a Three-Material Transition Model

I.W.O. Serlie, R. Truyen, Jasper Florie, Frits H. Post, L.J. van Vliet, and F.M. Vos

Manual segmentation compared to computed cleansing.

Virtual colonoscopy is a non-invasive technique for the detection of polyps. Currently, a clean colon is required; as without cleansing the colonic wall cannot be segmented. Enhanced bowel preparation schemes opacify intraluminal remains to enable colon segmentation. Computed cleansing (as opposed to physical cleansing of the bowels) allows removal of tagged intraluminal remains. This paper describes a model that allows proper classification of transitions between three materials: gas, tissue and tagged intraluminal remains. The computed cleansing effectively detects and removes the remains from the data. Inspection of the 'clean' wall is possible using common surface visualization techniques.


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Citation

I.W.O. Serlie, R. Truyen, Jasper Florie, Frits H. Post, L.J. van Vliet, and F.M. Vos, Computed Cleansing for Virtual Colonoscopy Using a Three-Material Transition Model, In Proceedings of MICCAI (2), pp. 175–183, 2003.

BibTex

@inproceedings{bib:serlie:2003,
    author       = { Serlie, I.W.O. and Truyen, R. and Florie, Jasper and Post, Frits H. and van Vliet, L.J. and Vos, F.M. },    
    title        = { Computed Cleansing for Virtual Colonoscopy Using a Three-Material Transition Model },
    booktitle    = { In Proceedings of MICCAI (2) },
    year         = { 2003 },
    pages        = { 175--183 },
    doi          = { 10.1007/978-3-540-39903-2_22 },
    dblp         = { conf/miccai/SerlieTFPVV03 },
    url          = { https://publications.graphics.tudelft.nl/papers/518 },
}