459 research outputs found

    Particle-based Sampling and Meshing of Surfaces in Multimaterial Volumes

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    Multi-Material Mesh Representation of Anatomical Structures for Deep Brain Stimulation Planning

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    The Dual Contouring algorithm (DC) is a grid-based process used to generate surface meshes from volumetric data. However, DC is unable to guarantee 2-manifold and watertight meshes due to the fact that it produces only one vertex for each grid cube. We present a modified Dual Contouring algorithm that is capable of overcoming this limitation. The proposed method decomposes an ambiguous grid cube into a set of tetrahedral cells and uses novel polygon generation rules that produce 2-manifold and watertight surface meshes with good-quality triangles. These meshes, being watertight and 2-manifold, are geometrically correct, and therefore can be used to initialize tetrahedral meshes. The 2-manifold DC method has been extended into the multi-material domain. Due to its multi-material nature, multi-material surface meshes will contain non-manifold elements along material interfaces or shared boundaries. The proposed multi-material DC algorithm can (1) generate multi-material surface meshes where each material sub-mesh is a 2-manifold and watertight mesh, (2) preserve the non-manifold elements along the material interfaces, and (3) ensure that the material interface or shared boundary between materials is consistent. The proposed method is used to generate multi-material surface meshes of deep brain anatomical structures from a digital atlas of the basal ganglia and thalamus. Although deep brain anatomical structures can be labeled as functionally separate, they are in fact continuous tracts of soft tissue in close proximity to each other. The multi-material meshes generated by the proposed DC algorithm can accurately represent the closely-packed deep brain structures as a single mesh consisting of multiple material sub-meshes. Each sub-mesh represents a distinct functional structure of the brain. Printed and/or digital atlases are important tools for medical research and surgical intervention. While these atlases can provide guidance in identifying anatomical structures, they do not take into account the wide variations in the shape and size of anatomical structures that occur from patient to patient. Accurate, patient-specific representations are especially important for surgical interventions like deep brain stimulation, where even small inaccuracies can result in dangerous complications. The last part of this research effort extends the discrete deformable 2-simplex mesh into the multi-material domain where geometry-based internal forces and image-based external forces are used in the deformation process. This multi-material deformable framework is used to segment anatomical structures of the deep brain region from Magnetic Resonance (MR) data

    CAD-Based Porous Scaffold Design of Intervertebral Discs in Tissue Engineering

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    With the development and maturity of three-dimensional (3D) printing technology over the past decade, 3D printing has been widely investigated and applied in the field of tissue engineering to repair damaged tissues or organs, such as muscles, skin, and bones, Although a number of automated fabrication methods have been developed to create superior bio-scaffolds with specific surface properties and porosity, the major challenges still focus on how to fabricate 3D natural biodegradable scaffolds that have tailor properties such as intricate architecture, porosity, and interconnectivity in order to provide the needed structural integrity, strength, transport, and ideal microenvironment for cell- and tissue-growth. In this dissertation, a robust pipeline of fabricating bio-functional porous scaffolds of intervertebral discs based on different innovative porous design methodologies is illustrated. Firstly, a triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) based parameterization method, which has overcome the integrity problem of traditional TPMS method, is presented in Chapter 3. Then, an implicit surface modeling (ISM) approach using tetrahedral implicit surface (TIS) is demonstrated and compared with the TPMS method in Chapter 4. In Chapter 5, we present an advanced porous design method with higher flexibility using anisotropic radial basis function (ARBF) and volumetric meshes. Based on all these advanced porous design methods, the 3D model of a bio-functional porous intervertebral disc scaffold can be easily designed and its physical model can also be manufactured through 3D printing. However, due to the unique shape of each intervertebral disc and the intricate topological relationship between the intervertebral discs and the spine, the accurate localization and segmentation of dysfunctional discs are regarded as another obstacle to fabricating porous 3D disc models. To that end, we discuss in Chapter 6 a segmentation technique of intervertebral discs from CT-scanned medical images by using deep convolutional neural networks. Additionally, some examples of applying different porous designs on the segmented intervertebral disc models are demonstrated in Chapter 6
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