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Fourier analysis methodology of trabecular orientation measurement in the human tibial epiphysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2001

M. HERRERA
Affiliation:
Unit of Human Anatomy and Biomechanics, University of Alicante, Spain
A. M. PONS
Affiliation:
Vision Laboratory, Department of Optics, University of Alicante, Spain
C. ILLUECA
Affiliation:
Vision Laboratory, Department of Optics, University of Alicante, Spain
D. ERADES
Affiliation:
Unit of Human Anatomy and Biomechanics, University of Alicante, Spain
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Abstract

Methods to quantify trabecular orientation are crucial in order to assess the exact trajectory of trabeculae in anatomical and histological sections. Specific methods for evaluating trabecular orientation include the ‘point counting’ technique (Whitehouse, 1974), manual tracing of trabecular outlines on a digitising board (Whitehouse, 1980), textural analysis (Veenland et al. 1998), graphic representation of vectors (Shimizu et al. 1993; Kamibayashi et al. 1995) and both mathematical (Geraets, 1998) and fractal analysis (Millard et al. 1998). Optical and computer-assisted methods to detect trabecular orientation of bone using the Fourier transform were introduced by Oxnard (1982) later refined by Kuo & Carter (1991) (see also Oxnard, 1993, for a review), in the analysis of planar sections of vertebral bodies as well as in planar radiographs of cancellous bone in the distal radius (Wigderowitz et al. 1997). At present no studies have applied this technique to 2-D images or to the study of dried bones. We report a universal computer-automated technique for assessing the preferential orientation of the tibial subarticular trabeculae based on Fourier analysis, emphasis being placed on the search for improvements in accuracy over previous methods and applied to large stereoscopic (2-D) fields of anatomical sections of dried human tibiae. Previous studies on the trajectorial architecture of the tibial epiphysis (Takechi, 1977; Maquet, 1984) and research data about trabecular orientation (Kamibayashi et al. 1995) have not employed Fourier analysis.

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
© Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2001

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