Title :
A comparison of similarity measures for use in 2-D-3-D medical image registration
Author :
Penney, Graeme P. ; Weese, Jürgen ; Little, John A. ; Desmedt, Paul ; Hill, Derek L G ; Hawkes, David J.
Author_Institution :
Div. of Radiol. Sci., Guys & St. Thomas Hosp., London, UK
Abstract :
A comparison of six similarity measures for use in intensity-based two-dimensional-three-dimensional (2-D-3-D) image registration is presented. The accuracy of the similarity measures are compared to a "gold-standard" registration which has been accurately calculated using fiducial markers. The similarity measures are used to register a computed tomography (CT) scan of a spine phantom to a fluoroscopy image of the phantom. The registration is carried out within a region-of-interest in the fluoroscopy image which is user defined to contain a single vertebra. Many of the problems involved in this type of registration are caused by features which were not modeled by a phantom image alone. More realistic "gold-standard" data sets were simulated using the phantom image with clinical image features overlaid. Results show that the introduction of soft-tissue structures and interventional instruments into the phantom image can have a large effect on the performance of some similarity measures previously applied to 2-D-3-D image registration. Two measures were able to register accurately and robustly even when soft-tissue structures and interventional instruments were present as differences between the images. These measures were pattern intensity and gradient difference. Their registration accuracy, for all the rigid-body parameters except for the source to film translation, was within a root-mean-square (rms) error of 0.53 mm or degrees to the "gold-standard" values. No failures occurred while registering using these measures.
Keywords :
computerised tomography; diagnostic radiography; image registration; medical image processing; 2-D-3-D medical image registration; clinical image features overlaid; computed tomography scan; fiducial markers; fluoroscopy image; gradient difference; intensity-based image registration; interventional instruments; medical diagnostic imaging; pattern intensity; region-of-interest; registration accuracy; similarity measures; single vertebra; soft-tissue structures; source to film translation; spine phantom; Biomedical imaging; Computed tomography; Image registration; Image segmentation; Imaging phantoms; Instruments; Magnetic resonance imaging; Optical imaging; Robustness; Ultrasonic imaging; Algorithms; Fluoroscopy; Humans; Phantoms, Imaging; Spine; Tomography, X-Ray Computed;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on