Paper
13 April 2017 Volume calculation of CT lung lesions based on Halton low-discrepancy sequences
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Abstract
Volume calculation from the Computed Tomography (CT) lung lesions data is a significant parameter for clinical diagnosis. The volume is widely used to assess the severity of the lung nodules and track its progression, however, the accuracy and efficiency of previous studies are not well achieved for clinical uses. It remains to be a challenging task due to its tight attachment to the lung wall, inhomogeneous background noises and large variations in sizes and shape.

In this paper, we employ Halton low-discrepancy sequences to calculate the volume of the lung lesions. The proposed method directly compute the volume without the procedure of three-dimension (3D) model reconstruction and surface triangulation, which significantly improves the efficiency and reduces the complexity. The main steps of the proposed method are: (1) generate a certain number of random points in each slice using Halton low-discrepancy sequences and calculate the lesion area of each slice through the proportion; (2) obtain the volume by integrating the areas in the sagittal direction. In order to evaluate our proposed method, the experiments were conducted on the sufficient data sets with different size of lung lesions. With the uniform distribution of random points, our proposed method achieves more accurate results compared with other methods, which demonstrates the robustness and accuracy for the volume calculation of CT lung lesions. In addition, our proposed method is easy to follow and can be extensively applied to other applications, e.g., volume calculation of liver tumor, atrial wall aneurysm, etc.
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Shusheng Li, Liansheng Wang, and Shuo Li "Volume calculation of CT lung lesions based on Halton low-discrepancy sequences", Proc. SPIE 10134, Medical Imaging 2017: Computer-Aided Diagnosis, 101343V (13 April 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2254364
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KEYWORDS
Lung

Computed tomography

3D modeling

Error analysis

Data modeling

Image segmentation

Medical imaging

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