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Medical Imaging for Solving The Mummy’s Mystery And More… Professor Aly A. Farag Computer Vision and Image Processing Laboratory University of Louisville Louisville, Kentucky, USA E-mail: [email protected] www.cvip.uofl.edu The Computer Vision and Image Processing Laboratory (CVIP Lab) The CVIP Lab. was established in 1994 at the University of Louisville. Has two broad focus areas: computer vision and medical imaging. Hosts unique and modern hardware for imaging, computing and visualization. CVIP Facilities 2 Supercomputers Robotic Arm Card-Eye ImmersaDesk 2 Robotic Platforms 3D Scanner Panoramic Displays CVIP People… Egyptology 101 • • • • • Pyramids Heliographic Conquerors of Egypt Mummification Great VISIOTRS of Egypt (e.g., Prophets) • Etc… Mummification Story • The process of mummification has two stages. • First, the embalming of the body. • Then, the wrapping and burial of the body. Embalming the body 1 First, his body is taken to the tent known as 'ibu' or the 'place of purification'. There the embalmers wash his body with goodsmelling palm wine and rinse it with water from the Nile. www.ancientegypt.co.uk/mummies The British Museum 2 One of the embalmer's men makes a cut in the left side of the body and removes many of the internal organs. It is important to remove these because they are the first part of the body to decompose. Embalming the body 3 4 A long hook is used to smash the brain and pull it out through the nose. The liver, lungs, stomach and intestines are washed and packed in natron which will dry them out. The heart is not taken out of the body because it is the centre of intelligence and feeling and the man will need it in the afterlife. 5 The body is now covered and stuffed with natron which will dry it out. All of the fluids, and rags from the embalming process will be saved and buried along with the body. www.ancientegypt.co.uk/mummies The British Museum Embalming the body After forty days the body is washed again with water from the Nile. Then it is covered with oils to help the skin stay elastic. 6 7 Finally the body is covered again with good-smelling oils. It is now ready to be wrapped in linen. www.ancientegypt.co.uk/mummies The British Museum The dehydrated internal organs are wrapped in linen and returned to the body. The body is stuffed with dry materials such as sawdust, leaves and linen so that it looks lifelike. 8 1 Wrapping the mummy First the head and neck are wrapped with strips of fine linen. Then the fingers and the toes are individually wrapped. This is the 'Isis knot' amulet which will protect the body. www.ancientegypt.co.uk/mummies The British Museum 2 The arms and legs are wrapped separately. Between the layers of wrapping, the embalmers place amulets to protect the body in its journey through the underworld. This is the 'Plummet' amulet which will keep the person balanced in the next life. Wrapping the mummy A priest reads spells out loud while the mummy is being wrapped. These spells will help ward off evil spirits and help the deceased make the journey to the afterlife 5 More linen strips are wrapped around the body. At every layer, the bandages are painted with liquid resin that helps to glue the bandages together. 3 4 The arms and legs are tied together. A papyrus scroll with spells from the Book of the Dead is placed between the wrapped hands. www.ancientegypt.co.uk/mummies The British Museum Wrapping the mummy 6 A cloth is wrapped around the body and a picture of the god Osiris is painted on its surface. 7 www.ancientegypt.co.uk/mummies The British Museum Finally, a large cloth is wrapped around the entire mummy. It is attached with strips of linen that run from the top to the bottom of the mummy, and around its middle. A board of painted wood is placed on top of the mummy before the mummy is lowered into its coffin. The first coffin is then put inside a second coffin Tchaenhotep • Ta= 'the', and hotep= 'content or calm'. • The overall name may be translated as 'the one who is content'. Tchaenhotep’s History • The tombs were first discovered in 1903, over one hundred years ago. • The mummy and the sarcophagus came to the United States to be displayed at the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair in the “Streets of Cairo Exhibit”. Tchaenhotep’s History • Louisvillian Samual Thruston Ballard was later responsible for bringing the mummy to Louisville where the mummy became a favorite attraction at the museum in the Louisville Free Public Library, at 4th & York. Tchaenhotep’s History • During the Ohio River Flood of 1937, the mummy was nearly destroyed. Tchaenhotep’s History • Rising waters caused a piano to fall on the mummy and, the head became separated from the body. • The mummy was later moved to 5th and York Streets and, in 1977, arrived at the present location of West Main Street. The mummy and coffin were on continuous display there until early in this century when they came to rest in the collections storage areas of the Louisville Science Center. What Can we Salvage from The Mummy? Medical Imaging Some Marvels… X-Ray Image Formation A beam of X-rays is directed through a patient onto a film. The film provides a measure of the ray attenuation in tissue. Nov 8, 1895 Wilhelm Konrad Röntgen reported discovery of new “rays” (Nobel Prize in physics in 1901). Jan 13, 1896 First clinical use of X-rays by 2 British doctors to find a needle in a hand. + Excellent for imaging bones. - No depth information, bad for soft tissue, excessive radiation Sample X-Ray Slices Computed Tomography (CT) Image Formation The object is viewed from a number of different angles and then a crosssectional image of it can be computed (reconstructed). 1965 G. Hounsfield (computer expert) and A.M Cormack (physicist) (Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1979). + Provide 3D anatomical information + Preserves topology (bones) - Excessive radiation - Not good for all soft tissues Computed Tomography (CT) • The object is viewed from a number of different angles and then a crosssectional image of it can be computed (reconstructed). Sample CT Slices CT Acquisition Techniques slice-by-slice scanning Spiral (volume) scanning (Very Fast) 3D Reconstruction Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Image Formation - Hydrogen nuclei (protons) under a strong magnetic field spin in phase with one another and align with the field. - Relaxed protons induce a measurable radio signal. 1952 F. Bloch and E. Purcel, extended by R. Ernst) (Bloch & Purcel: Nobel Prize in Physics in 1952) (Ernst: Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1991) Paul Luterberg: Nobel Prize in Physcis in 2004 For Basic MRI Research + Main modality for image guided surgery. + Superb ability to discriminate between subtle differences in tissue characteristics. + Very safe. - Less accurate for bone scanning. Sample MRI Slices Ultrasound (US) Image Formation An ultrasonic energy is propagated into the patient from a transducer placed on the skin and back-scattered echo signal is recorded by the same transducer. 1979: Samuel H. Maslak + Noninvasive + Clean & safe + In-expensive - Noisy - Gas filled and bony structures cannot be imaged because they absorb ultrasound waves. Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Image Formation - Detection of radiation from the emission of positrons. 1998-2001: Dr. David Townsend and Dr. Ron Nutt. + Valuable technique for some diseases and disorders. + Amount of radiation is small - Invasive (inject radioactive material) 3D Model Building Segmentation CT Segmentation MRI Segmentation MRA Multimodal Registration Fusion 3D Brain Models from MRI Scans An MRI Scan Fusion of Multiple scans vascular tree Structural Brain Model Back to The Mummy…. X-ray Capture the Data Base •The team at Baptist East Hospital performed a CT scan on the Tchaenhotep mummy’s and a data base of images of the heard was supplied on CDs. • Each image consisted of 512x512 pixels (picture elements). •Each pixel in the image slice was represented by a 16 bit grayscale value giving a gray level range from 0 (completely black) to 65535 (completely white). CT IMAGES Capture the Data Base •The team at Baptist East Hospital performed a CT scan on the Tchaenhotep mummy’s and a data base of images of the heard was supplied on CDs. • Each image consisted of 512x512 pixels (picture elements). •Each pixel in the image slice was represented by a 16 bit grayscale value giving a gray level range from 0 (completely black) to 65535 (completely white). CT IMAGES CT SCAN Slice • Difference between the mummy’s CT slice and a living person’s CT Slice. << Mummy Normal >> Registration of slices and 3D stack • By reading the images into a computer and stacking them, a 3D volume of the CT scans can be made, creating a virtually 3D skull inside the computer’s memory. • The process required aligning various features from slice to slice = Segmentation • • • The next stage is the process of segmentation where we assign labels to each data that declares if the voxel is bone tissue or air or other tissue. In this Segmentation we used a simple thresholding method. In the CT image air is black (or has a zero value) and the bone tissue is white. We set a range where any pixel above a value of 255 is labeled bone. CT Image were all gray levels are mapped to white. CT Image CT Image with gray level values above 255 CT SCAN Slice • Difference between the mummy’s CT slice and a living person’s CT Slice. << Mummy Normal >> Reducing the Triangle Count • The number of X,Y,Z coordinates creating the ISO-surface is quite large. • Our volume consists of 512x512x198 or 51,904,512 voxels and each voxel has an X,Y,Z coordinate. • If half of the volume is labeled bone, then there are more than 25 million X,Y,Z coordinates. • We reduce this by using a process called DECIMATION. • Decimation reduces the number of triangles which make up the ISO-Surface by removing duplicate or unneeded triangles. Polydata Mapping •Once the we have the triangles reduced, two more actions are performed. •First we create a surface for the computer to display by filling the triangles in a process we call polydata mapping. •Second, we create a stereo lithography (STL) file for use by the rapid prototype machine which creates the 3D plastic model. 3D Reconstuction and STL Wire Mesh • • We save only the bone voxels for our final virtual model’s data base. ( voxels are 3d pixels ) Next we create a stereo lithography (STL) file for use by the rapid prototype machine which creates the 3D plastic model. Generate STL file, 3D Reconstuction and STL Wire • We are then ready for the SLA process in the rapid prototyping machine. Summary Movie End!