Paper
6 June 2000 3D reconstruction of a human heart fascicle using SurfDriver
Robert J. Rader, Steven J. Phillips, Paul S. LaFollette Jr.
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Temple University Medical School has a sequence of over 400 serial sections of adult normal ventricular human heart tissue, cut at 25 micrometer thickness. We used a Zeiss Ultraphot with a 4x planapo objective and a Pixera digital camera to make a series of 45 sequential montages to use in the 3D reconstruction of a fascicle (muscle bundle). We wrote custom software to merge 4 smaller image fields from each section into one composite image. We used SurfDriver software, developed by Scott Lozanoff of the University of Hawaii and David Moody of the University of Alberta, for registration, object boundary identification, and 3D surface reconstruction. We used an Epson Stylus Color 900 printer to get photo-quality prints. We describe the challenge and our solution to the following problems: image acquisition and digitization, image merge, alignment and registration, boundary identification, 3D surface reconstruction, 3D visualization and orientation, snapshot, and photo-quality prints.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Robert J. Rader, Steven J. Phillips, and Paul S. LaFollette Jr. "3D reconstruction of a human heart fascicle using SurfDriver", Proc. SPIE 3979, Medical Imaging 2000: Image Processing, (6 June 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.387721
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
3D modeling

3D image processing

Image registration

3D image reconstruction

Heart

Printing

Software development

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