Literature DB >> 17273920

Medical applications of digital image morphing.

Keith Penska1, Les Folio, Rolf Bunger.   

Abstract

The authors present a unique medical technical application for illustrating the success and/or failure of the physiological healing process as a dynamically morphed video. Two examples used in this report include the healing of a severely fractured humerus from an explosion in Iraq and the other of dramatic tissue destruction from a poisonous spider bite. For the humerus, several sequential x-rays obtained throughout orthopedic surgical procedures and the healing process were morphed together representing a time-lapsed video of the healing process. The end result is a video that demonstrates the healing process in an animation that radiologists envision and report to other clinicians. For the brown recluse spider bite, a seemingly benign skin lesion transforms into a wide gaping necrotic wound with dramatic appearance within days. This novel technique is not presented for readily apparent clinical advantage, rather, it may have more immediate application in providing treatment options to referring providers and/or patients, as well as educational value of healing or disease progression over time. Image morphing is one of those innovations that is just starting to come into its own. Morphing is an image processing technology that transforms one image into another by generating a series of intermediate synthetic images. It is the same process that Hollywood uses to turn people into animals in movies, for example. The ability to perform morphing, once restricted to high-end graphics workstations, is now widely available for desktop computers. The authors describe how a series of radiographic images were morphed into a short movie clip using readily available software and an average laptop. The resultant video showed the healing process of an open comminuted humerus fracture that helped demonstrate how amazingly the human body heals in a case presentation in a time-lapse fashion.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17273920      PMCID: PMC3043901          DOI: 10.1007/s10278-006-1050-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Digit Imaging        ISSN: 0897-1889            Impact factor:   4.056


  3 in total

1.  Computer-aided placement of deep brain stimulators: from planning to intraoperative guidance.

Authors:  Pierre-François D'Haese; Ebru Cetinkaya; Peter E Konrad; Chris Kao; Benoit M Dawant
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 10.048

2.  Frostbite in a mountain climber treated with hyperbaric oxygen: case report.

Authors:  Les Roger Folio; Keren Arkin; William P Butler
Journal:  Mil Med       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 1.437

3.  Computer-assisted documentation and analysis of wound healing of the nasal and oesophageal mucosa.

Authors:  R Weber; R Keerl; D Jaspersen; A Huppmann; B Schick; W Draf
Journal:  J Laryngol Otol       Date:  1996-11       Impact factor: 1.469

  3 in total

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