Search results for "three-dimensional"

showing 10 items of 370 documents

3D reconstruction techniques made easy: know-how and pictures

2005

Three-dimensional reconstructions represent a visual-based tool for illustrating the basis of three-dimensional post-processing such as interpolation, ray-casting, segmentation, percentage classification, gradient calculation, shading and illumination. The knowledge of the optimal scanning and reconstruction parameters facilitates the use of three-dimensional reconstruction techniques in clinical practise. The aim of this article is to explain the principles of multidimensional image processing in a pictorial way and the advantages and limitations of the different possibilities of 3D visualisation.

medicine.medical_specialtyAudiovisual Aids Computer Graphics Computer-Aided Design Humans Image Processing; Computer-Assisted/*methods Imaging; Three-Dimensional/*methods Motion Pictures as Topic Radiographic Image Interpretation; Computer-Assisted/methods Tomography; X-Ray Computed/methods User-Computer InterfaceMotion PicturesImage processingIterative reconstructionComputer-Assisted/*methods ImagingUser-Computer InterfaceImaging Three-DimensionalAudiovisual Aids Computer Graphics Computer-Aided Design Humans Image ProcessingComputer-Assisted/methods TomographyComputer GraphicsImage Processing Computer-AssistedMedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingSegmentationThree-Dimensional/*methods Motion Pictures as Topic Radiographic Image InterpretationTomographic reconstructionAudiovisual Aidsbusiness.industry3D reconstructionIndustrial computed tomographyX-Ray Computed/methods User-Computer InterfaceGeneral MedicineVisualizationComputer-Aided DesignRadiographic Image Interpretation Computer-AssistedRadiologybusinessTomography X-Ray Computed3D reconstruction techniquesInterpolation
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Advanced Protocol for Three-Dimensional Transesophageal Echocardiography Guidance Implementing Real-Time Multiplanar Reconstruction for Transcatheter…

2019

Transcatheter direct annuloplasty has been introduced as a novel interventional treatment option for severe mitral valve regurgitation. Until now, only one direct annuloplasty device (Edwards Cardioband) has been commercially available, being implanted in more than 250 patients worldwide. Yet this procedure poses greater challenges regarding optimal fluoroscopic and echocardiographic guidance compared with edge-to-edge repair: correct localization and orientation of the anchors upon penetration into the fibrous mitral annulus tissue and the basal left ventricular myocardium are preconditions for an optimal result and essential to avoid damage of the neighboring structures (atrioventricular …

medicine.medical_specialtyCardiac CatheterizationMitral Valve AnnuloplastyEchocardiography Three-Dimensional030204 cardiovascular system & hematology030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImage Interpretation Computer-AssistedmedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingCircumflexCoronary sinusProtocol (science)Interventional treatmentbusiness.industryMitral Valve InsufficiencyMultiplanar reconstructionmedicine.diseaseAtrioventricular nodemedicine.anatomical_structureSurgery Computer-Assistedcardiovascular systemTranscatheter mitral valve repairRadiologyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessMitral valve regurgitationEchocardiography TransesophagealJournal of the American Society of Echocardiography : official publication of the American Society of Echocardiography
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Diagnostic of craniofacial asymmetry : literature review

2009

Facial asymmetry is a common feature in many syndromes, and requires surgery as the only valid treatment option. Routine diagnostic methods (frontal RX, panoramic RX and submentovertex RX) have serious limitations mainly due to the transfer from a three dimensional image to a two dimensional plane. The feasibility of such methods is poorly supported due to inherent projection errors (image magnification, cranial rotation) and identification errors (image quality, precision and reproducibility). The use of computer tomographies represents a substantial improvement in the sense of skeletal and soft tissue structures? reproduction precision. The interpretation of this new data source makes evi…

medicine.medical_specialtyComputer scienceImage qualityCephalometryMagnificationCraniofacial AbnormalitiesImaging Three-DimensionalmedicineX ray diagnosisHumansComputer visionProjection (set theory)General Dentistrybusiness.industryCranio-facial asymmetry:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]SurgeryDiagnostic errorOtorhinolaryngologyFacial AsymmetryFeature (computer vision)CephalometryUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASSurgeryCraniofacial asymmetryArtificial intelligencebusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedRotation (mathematics)Facial symmetry
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Artefacts in CBCT: a review

2011

Artefacts are common in today's cone beam CT (CBCT). They are induced by discrepancies between the mathematical modelling and the actual physical imaging process. Since artefacts may interfere with the diagnostic process performed on CBCT data sets, every user should be aware of their presence. This article aims to discuss the most prominent artefacts identified in the scientific literature and review the existing knowledge on these artefacts. We also briefly review the basic three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction concept applied by today's CBCT scanners, as all artefacts are more or less directly related to it.

medicine.medical_specialtyCone beam computed tomographyComputer scienceMetal artefactImage processingReviewImaging Three-DimensionalScattering radiationImage Processing Computer-AssistedmedicineHumansScattering RadiationRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingMedical physicsComputer visionGeneral DentistryCone beam ctPhantoms Imagingbusiness.industryGeneral MedicineCone-Beam Computed TomographyModels TheoreticalRadiographic Image EnhancementOtorhinolaryngologyArtificial intelligenceArtifactsbusinessAlgorithmsDentomaxillofacial Radiology
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Forefoot strikers exhibit lower running-induced knee loading than rearfoot strikers.

2013

AB Purpose: Knee pain and Achilles tendinopathies are the most common complaints among runners. The differences in the running mechanics may play an important role in the pathogenesis of lower limb overuse injuries. However, the effect of a runner's foot strike pattern on the ankle and especially on the knee loading is poorly understood. The purpose of this study was to examine whether runners using a forefoot strike pattern exhibit a different lower limb loading profile than runners who use rearfoot strike pattern. Methods: Nineteen female athletes with a natural forefoot strike (FFS) pattern and pair-matched women with rearfoot strike (RFS) pattern (n = 19) underwent 3-D running analysis …

medicine.medical_specialtyHeelAdolescentPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationAchilles TendonRunningWeight-BearingPatellofemoral JointYoung AdultImaging Three-DimensionalKnee loadingMedicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineAnkle Injuriesta315OrthodonticsAchilles tendonbusiness.industryFootForefootmedicine.anatomical_structureKnee painCoronal planePhysical therapyFemaleStress MechanicalFoot Injurymedicine.symptomAnklebusinesshuman activitiesAnkle JointMedicine and science in sports and exercise
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Multidimensional Optical Sensing and Imaging Systems (MOSIS): From Macro to Micro Scales

2017

Multidimensional optical imaging systems for information processing and visualization technologies have numerous applications in fields such as manufacturing, medical sciences, entertainment, robotics, surveillance, and defense. Among different three-dimensional (3-D) imaging methods, integral imaging is a promising multiperspective sensing and display technique. Compared with other 3-D imaging techniques, integral imaging can capture a scene using an incoherent light source and generate real 3-D images for observation without any special viewing devices. This review paper describes passive multidimensional imaging systems combined with different integral imaging configurations. One example…

medicine.medical_specialtyIntegral imagingbusiness.industryMultispectral imageComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONImaging spectrometerImage registrationImage sensorsOptical imagingSpectral imagingGeographyFull spectral imagingOptical sensorsmedicineThree-dimensional displaysComputer visionArtificial intelligenceImaging scienceElectrical and Electronic EngineeringImage sensorbusinessVisualization
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Automatic detection of lung nodules in CT datasets based on stable 3D mass–spring models

2012

We propose a computer-aided detection (CAD) system which can detect small-sized (from 3 mm) pulmonary nodules in spiral CT scans. A pulmonary nodule is a small lesion in the lungs, round-shaped (parenchymal nodule) or worm-shaped (juxtapleural nodule). Both kinds of lesions have a radio-density greater than lung parenchyma, thus appearing white on the images. Lung nodules might indicate a lung cancer and their early stage detection arguably improves the patient survival rate. CT is considered to be the most accurate imaging modality for nodule detection. However, the large amount of data per examination makes the full analysis difficult, leading to omission of nodules by the radiologist. We…

medicine.medical_specialtyLung NeoplasmsDatabases FactualHealth InformaticsCADModels BiologicalSensitivity and SpecificityImaging Three-DimensionalSegmentationLung nodulemedicineFalse positive paradoxSegmentation; Lung nodules; Active contours models;Computer tomography (CT); Mass–spring models; Spline curves; Image featuresHumansSegmentationDiagnosis Computer-AssistedStage (cooking)Lung cancerComputer tomography (CT)business.industryNodule (medicine)Image featuresSpline curvemedicine.diseaseSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Computer Science ApplicationsRegion growingMass–spring modelRadiologyTomographymedicine.symptombusinessTomography Spiral ComputedAlgorithmsActive contours model
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Patent Foramen Ovale and Thromboembolic Complications

2010

The foramen ovale, an atrial septal defect which is essential in the fetal circulation, remains patent through adulthood in approximately 25% of the general population and so it represents the most common persistent abnormality of fetal origin. Patent foramen ovale (PFO) allows interatrial right-to-left blood shunting during those periods of the cardiac cycle in which the right atrial pressure exceeds the left one. An increasing number of pathological manifestations of PFO has been recently identified; among these, paradoxical systemic embolism, refractory hypoxemia in patients with right ventricular myocardium infarction or severe pulmonary disease, orthostatic oxygen desaturation in the r…

medicine.medical_specialtyMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyPopulationEchocardiography Three-DimensionalForamen secundumForamen Ovale PatentPersistent fetal circulationHypoxemiaPFOThromboembolismDrug DiscoverymedicineHumanseducationForamen ovale (heart)Pharmacologyeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industrySettore MED/23 - Chirurgia Cardiacamedicine.diseaseSettore MED/11 - Malattie Dell'Apparato CardiovascolareThrombosisSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureEmbolismEchocardiographyPatent foramen ovalemedicine.symptomTomography X-Ray ComputedbusinessEchocardiography TransesophagealCurrent Pharmaceutical Design
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3D virtual histopathology of cardiac tissue from Covid-19 patients based on phase-contrast X-ray tomography

2021

eLife 10, e71359 (2021). doi:10.7554/eLife.71359

medicine.medical_specialtyMyocarditisViral MyocarditisQH301-705.5Science030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyStructure tensorGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesImaging Three-Dimensional0302 clinical medicineArtificial IntelligencemedicineHumansBiology (General)Intussusceptive angiogenesis030304 developmental biologyx-ray tomography0303 health sciencesGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologySARS-CoV-2business.industryGeneral NeuroscienceMyocardiumQRX-rayHeart600General Medicinemedicine.disease3. Good healthCross section (geometry)MyocarditisEpidemiology and Global Healthcardiac tissueMedicineHistopathologyTomographyTomography X-Ray ComputedCovid-19businessddc:600SynchrotronsResearch ArticleHumanBiomedical engineering
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Neo-nervegenesis in 3D dynamic responsive implant for inguinal hernia repair. Qualitative study.

2020

Abstract Background Prosthetic repair of inguinal hernias is one of the most performed surgical procedures. Nevertheless, high rates of complications affect the surgical treatment. Implant fixation, poor-quality tissue ingrowth and mesh shrinkage seem to be involved in postoperative complications, discomfort and chronic pain following inguinal hernia repair. To address these issues a multilamellar shaped 3D dynamic responsive prosthesis has been developed. This new implant, positioned fixation-free to obliterate the hernia opening, thanks its inherent dynamic compliance during inguinal movements, has demonstrated to induce an enhanced biological response. The ingrowth of newly formed muscle…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeo-nervegenesimedicine.medical_treatmentConnective tissueArtificial LimbsHernia InguinalGroinProsthesisProsthesis Implantation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePostoperative ComplicationsProstheseBiopsymedicineHumansHerniaTissue scaffoldsHerniorrhaphyQualitative ResearchGroinmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryInguinal herniaNerveGeneral MedicineSurgical Meshmedicine.diseaseHernia repairSurgerySettore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleInguinal herniamedicine.anatomical_structure030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPrinting Three-DimensionalTissue regeneration030211 gastroenterology & hepatologySurgeryImplantbusinessInternational journal of surgery (London, England)
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