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J Appl Physiol 95: 1063-1075, 2003. First published May 16, 2003; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00962.2002
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Maximizing quantitative accuracy of lung airway lumen and wall measures obtained from X-ray CT imaging

Osama I. Saba, Eric A. Hoffman, and Joseph M. Reinhardt

Departments of Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242

Submitted 2 November 2002 ; accepted in final form 2 May 2003

To objectively quantify airway geometry from three-dimensional computed tomographic (CT) images, an idealized (circular cross section) airway model is parameterized by airway luminal caliber, wall thickness, and tilt angle. Using a two-dimensional CT slice, an initial guess for the airway center, and the full-width-half-maximum principle, we form an estimate of inner and outer airway wall locations. We then fit ellipses to the inner and outer airway walls via a direct least squares fit and use the major and minor axes of the ellipses to estimate the tilt and in-plane rotation angles. Convolving the airway model, initialized with these estimates, with the three-dimensional scanner point-spread function forms the predicted image. The difference between predicted and actual images is minimized by refining the model parameter estimates via a multidimensional, unconstrained, nonlinear minimization routine. When optimization converges, airway model parameters estimate the airway inner and outer radii and tilt angle. Results using a Plexiglas phantom show that tilt angle is estimated to within ±4° and both inner and outer radii to within one-half pixel when a "standard" CT reconstruction kernel is used. By opening up the ability to measure airways that are not oriented perpendicular to the scanning plane, this method allows evaluation of a greater sampling of airways in a two-dimensional CT slice than previously possible. In addition, by combining the tilt-angle compensation with the deconvolution method, we provide significant improvement over the previous full-width-half-maximum method for assessing location of the luminal edge but not the outer edge of the airway wall.

airway area; bronchial tree; lung imaging; quantitative computed tomography; deconvolution



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. M. Reinhardt, Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, Univ. of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242 (E-mail: joe-reinhardt{at}uiowa.edu).




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