Abstract Reference
Unique Identifier
96071954
Authors
Robertson DD, Sutherland CJ, Chan BW, Hodge JC, Scott WW, Fishman
EK
Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University Medical Center, St.
Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Title
Depiction of pelvic fractures using 3D volumetric
holography: comparison of plain X-ray and CT.
Source
J Comput Assist Tomogr 1995 Nov;19(6):967-974
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility and test
the diagnostic performance of a new technology, 3D volumetric holography, for
imaging pelvic fractures. The management of pelvic fractures may be complex,
and advanced imaging studies such as CT are frequently indicated. Multiplanar
CT reformations and 3D renderings provide clinically useful and complementary
display of the directly acquired CT data. With the recent availability of
volumetric multiple exposure holograms, produced from serial image data, it is
now possible to produce true 3D images of the pelvis. In the hologram, one may
view the CT data in 3D or as individual planar slices constituting the whole 3D
pelvis. The diagnostic performance of the volumetric multiple exposure
holograms was tested against routine radiography, CT, and 3D volumetric CT
reconstructions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Routine radiography and CT
were performed in 15 patients with suspected pelvic fractures. Volumetric
multiple exposure holograms and 3D volumetric CT reconstructions were created
from the CT data. Axial and multiplanar reformation CT images were used as
the standard for fracture, diastasis, and intraarticular fragment detection.
RESULTS: Radiograms detected 39 of 50 of the fractures and diastases and no
intraarticular fragments. The 3D CT reconstructions and the holograms viewed
as 3D objects alone missed two small fractures of the anterior column and one hip
with intraarticular bone fragments. When the volumetric multiple exposure
holograms were viewed as a 3D object and as individual planar slices constituting
the whole, their results were the same as the standard. CONCLUSION:
Volumetric multiple exposure holograms were as sensitive and specific as axial
CT and multiplanar reformations in detecting fracture pathology. By containing
and making available, from one image, both planar and 3D information,
volumetric multiple exposure holograms detected subtle anatomical features that
were hidden by overlapping structures in the radiographs and the 3D CT images.
MeSH Heading
- Fractures/radiography*
- Holography*
- Human
- Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
|
- Pelvic Bones/radiography*
- Retrospective Studies
- Tomography, X-Ray Computed
|
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