Volume 5, Issue 3 pp. 227-233
Article
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A new method for automatic recognition of the radiographic trabecular pattern

Wil G. M. Geraets

Corresponding Author

Wil G. M. Geraets

Department of Oral Radiology, Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA), Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Department of Oral Radiology, ACTA, Louwesweg 1, 1066 EA Amsterdam, The NetherlandsSearch for more papers by this author
Paul F. van der Stelt

Paul F. van der Stelt

Department of Oral Radiology, Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA), Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

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Coen J. Netelenbos

Coen J. Netelenbos

Department of Oral Radiology, Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA), Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

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Petra J. M. Elders

Petra J. M. Elders

Department of Oral Radiology, Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA), Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

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First published: March 1990
Citations: 99

Abstract

This study reports a method to describe and analyze the structure of the trabecular pattern seen on radiographs of the distal radius. The structure is measured and related to the bone mineral density (BMD) of the lumbar spine measured by dual-photon absorptiometry.

Radiographs of hand and wrist combined with additional information of the bone mineral density of the vertebrae serve as testing material. With a computer-aided imaging system, a part of the depicted radius is scanned. The image is filtered and segmented into a bilevel picture consisting of a light network with dark meshes. Seven features of the bilevel picture are measured and analyzed.

It is shown that six features correlate significantly with the bone mineral density measured at the lumbar spine, although the correlations between the trabecular pattern and the BMD are too weak to allow precise predictions of BMD values for individuals. Nevertheless, the correlations confirm the existence of a relationship between the radiographic trabecular pattern and the bone mineral density of the lumbar spine. The method is worth being further developed for use on individual patients. It provides a noninvasive tool to make an objective and quantitative assessment of the trabecular pattern.

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