Title
Automatic segmentation of kidneys from non-contrast CT images using efficient belief propagation
Abstract
CT colonography (CTC) can increase the chance of detecting high-risk lesions not only within the colon but anywhere in the abdomen with a low cost. Extracolonic findings such as calculi and masses are frequently found in the kidneys on CTC. Accurate kidney segmentation is an important step to detect extracolonic findings in the kidneys. However, non-contrast CTC images make the task of kidney segmentation substantially challenging because the intensity values of kidney parenchyma are similar to those of adjacent structures. In this paper, we present a fully automatic kidney segmentation algorithm to support extracolonic diagnosis from CTC data. It is built upon three major contributions: 1) localize kidney search regions by exploiting the segmented liver and spleen as well as body symmetry; 2) construct a probabilistic shape prior handling the issue of kidney touching other organs; 3) employ efficient belief propagation on the shape prior to extract the kidneys. We evaluated the accuracy of our algorithm on five non-contrast CTC datasets with manual kidney segmentation as the ground-truth. The Dice volume overlaps were 88%/89%, the root-mean-squared errors were 3.4 mm/2.8 mm, and the average surface distances were 2.1 mm/1.9 mm for the left/right kidney respectively. We also validated the robustness on 27 additional CTC cases, and 23 datasets were successfully segmented. In four problematic cases, the segmentation of the left kidney failed due to problems with the spleen segmentation. The results demonstrated that the proposed algorithm could automatically and accurately segment kidneys from CTC images, given the prior correct segmentation of the liver and spleen.
Year
DOI
Venue
2013
10.1117/12.2007738
Proceedings of SPIE
Keywords
Field
DocType
Kidney segmentation,extracolonic finding,CT colonography,belief propagation,Markov random field
Computer vision,Probabilistic atlas,Segmentation,Artificial intelligence,Virtual colonoscopy,Medical diagnostics,Radiology,Belief propagation,Kidney,Physics
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
8670
0277-786X
5
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.48
5
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jianfei Liu18112.98
Marius George Linguraru236248.94
Shijun Wang323922.83
Ronald M. Summers489386.16