Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Institutional Repository

Prominent region of interest contrast enhancement for knee MR images: data from the OAI

Sia, Joyce Sin Yin and Tan, Tian Swee and Yahya, Azli and Tiong, Matthias Foh Thye and Ling, Kelvin Chia Hiik and Leong, Kah Meng and Tan, Jia Hou and Ahmed Malik, Sameen (2020) Prominent region of interest contrast enhancement for knee MR images: data from the OAI. Jurnal Kejuruteraan (Journal Of Engineering), 32 (3). pp. 145-155. ISSN 2289-7526

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Official URL: https://www.ukm.my/jkukm/volume-323-2020/

Abstract

Osteoarthritis is the most commonly seen arthritis, where there are 30.8 million adults affected in 2015. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) plays a key role to provide direct visualization and quantitative measurement on knee cartilage to monitor the osteoarthritis progression. However, the visual quality of MRI data can be influenced by poor background luminance, complex human knee anatomy, and indistinctive tissue contrast. Typical histogram equalisation methods are proven to be irrelevant in processing the biomedical images due to their steep cumulative density function (CDF) mapping curve which could result in severe washout and distortion on subject details. In this paper, the prominent region of interest contrast enhancement method (PROICE) is proposed to separate the original histogram of a 16-bit biomedical image into two Gaussians that cover dark pixels region and bright pixels region respectively. After obtaining the mean of the brighter region, where our ROI – knee cartilage falls, the mean becomes a break point to process two Bezier transform curves separately. The Bezier curves are then combined to replace the typical CDF curve to equalize the original histogram. The enhanced image preserves knee feature as well as region of interest (ROI) mean brightness. The image enhancement performance tests show that PROICE has achieved the highest peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR=24.747±1.315dB), lowest absolute mean brightness error (AMBE=0.020±0.007) and notably structural similarity index (SSIM=0.935±0.019). In other words, PROICE has considerably outperformed the other approaches in terms of its noise reduction, perceived image quality, its precision and has shown great potential to visually assist physicians in their diagnosis and decision-making process.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:knee anatomy, cumulative density function (CDF)
Subjects:Q Science > Q Science (General)
Divisions:Science
ID Code:93633
Deposited By: Widya Wahid
Deposited On:31 Dec 2021 08:45
Last Modified:31 Dec 2021 08:45

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