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Biplane

About: Biplane is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 513 publications have been published within this topic receiving 8651 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The theoretical localization precision for an unbiased estimator of the DH-PSF is compared to that for 3D localization by astigmatic and biplane imaging using Fisher information analysis including pixelation and varying levels of background.
Abstract: Wide-field microscopy with a double-helix point spread function (DH-PSF) provides three-dimensional (3D) position information beyond the optical diffraction limit. We compare the theoretical localization precision for an unbiased estimator of the DH-PSF to that for 3D localization by astigmatic and biplane imaging using Fisher information analysis including pixelation and varying levels of background. The DH-PSF results in almost constant localization precision in all three dimensions for a 2 μm thick depth of field while astigmatism and biplane improve the axial localization precision over smaller axial ranges. For high signal-to-background ratio, the DH-PSF on average achieves better localization precision.

128 citations

Patent
27 Nov 1987
TL;DR: In this article, a method for determining 3D structure in biplane angiography is proposed, including determining the distance of a perpendicular line from the focal points of respective x-ray sources to respective image planes and defining the origin of each biplane image as the point of intersection with the perpendicular line.
Abstract: A novel method for determination of 3-D structure in biplane angiography, including determining the distance of a perpendicular line from the focal spots of respective x-ray sources to respective image planes and defining the origin of each biplane image as the point of intersection with the perpendicular line thereto, obtaining two biplane digital images at arbitrary orientations with respect to an object, identifying at least 8 points in both images which correspond to respective points in the object, determining the image coordinates of the 8 or more identified object points in the respective biplane images, constructing a set of linear equations in 8 unknowns based on the image coordinates of the object points and based on the known focal spot to image plane distances for the two biplane images; solving the linear equations to yield the 8 unknowns, which represent the fundamental geometric parameters of the biplane imaging system; using the fundamental parameters to calculate the 3-dimensional positions of the object points identified in the biplane images; and determination of the 3-D positions of the vessel segments between the object points.

121 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A three-dimensional (3-D) method for tracking the coronary arteries through a temporal sequence of biplane X-ray angiography images is presented, and the performance of the tracking algorithm was quantified in three dimensions using a deforming vascular phantom.
Abstract: A three-dimensional (3-D) method for tracking the coronary arteries through a temporal sequence of biplane X-ray angiography images is presented. A 3-D centerline model of the coronary vasculature is reconstructed from a biplane image pair at one time frame, and its motion is tracked using a coarse-to-fine hierarchy of motion models. Three-dimensional constraints on the length of the arteries and on the spatial regularity of the motion field are used to overcome limitations of classical two-dimensional vessel tracking methods, such as tracking vessels through projective occlusions. This algorithm was clinically validated in five patients by tracking the motion of the left coronary tree over one cardiac cycle. The root mean square reprojection errors were found to be submillimeter in 93% (54/58) of the image pairs. The performance of the tracking algorithm was quantified in three dimensions using a deforming vascular phantom. RMS 3-D distance errors were computed between centerline models tracked in the X-ray images and gold-standard centerline models of the phantom generated from a gated 3-D magnetic resonance image acquisition. The mean error was 0.69(/spl plusmn/0.06) mm over eight temporal phases and four different biplane orientations.

118 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: LA single dimension is not accurate for LA size measurement, and the biplane, which is readily applicable with current echocardiographic equipment, should be routinely applied in clinical practice.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The model-based tracking technique is sufficiently accurate in measuring clinically relevant changes in PF joint motion following conservative or surgical treatment as well as overall dynamic accuracy of four clinically-relevant kinematic parameters.
Abstract: Accurately measuring in-vivo motion of the knee's patellofemoral (PF) joint is challenging. Conventional measurement techniques have largely been unable to accurately measure three-dimensional, in-vivo motion of the patella during dynamic activities. The purpose of this study was to assess the accuracy of a new model-based technique for measuring PF joint motion. To assess the accuracy of this technique, we implanted tantalum beads into the femur and patella of three cadaveric knee specimens and then recorded dynamic biplane radiographic images while manually flexing and extending the specimen. The position of the femur and patella were measured from the biplane images using both the model-based tracking system and a validated dynamic radiostereometric analysis (RSA) technique. Model-based tracking was compared to dynamic RSA by computing measures of bias, precision, and overall dynamic accuracy of four clinically-relevant kinematic parameters (patellar shift, flexion, tilt, and rotation). The model-based tracking technique results were in excellent agreement with the RSA technique. Overall dynamic accuracy indicated errors of less than 0.395 mm for patellar shift, 0.875° for flexion, 0.863° for tilt, and 0.877° for rotation. This model-based tracking technique is a non-invasive method for accurately measuring dynamic PF joint motion under in-vivo conditions. The technique is sufficiently accurate in measuring clinically relevant changes in PF joint motion following conservative or surgical treatment.

112 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202340
202278
20218
202019
201914
201818