Tooth Position Determination by Automatic Cutting and Marking of Dental Panoramic X-ray Film in Medical Image Processing

This paper presents a novel method for automatic segmentation of dental X-ray images into single tooth sections and for placing every segmented tooth onto a precise corresponding position table. Moreover, the proposed method automatically determines the tooth’s position in a panoramic X-ray film. Th...

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Main Authors: Huang, Yen-Cheng, Chen, Chiung-An, Chen, Tsung-Yi, Chou, He-Sheng, Lin, Wei-Chi, Li, Tzu-Chien, Yuan, Jia-Jun, Lin, Szu-Yin, Li, Chun-Wei, Chen, Shih-Lun, Mao, Yi-Cheng, Abu, Patricia Angela R, Chiang, Wei-Yuan, Lo, Wen-Shen
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2021
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/discs-faculty-pubs/244
https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1239&context=discs-faculty-pubs
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.discs-faculty-pubs-12392022-04-28T05:24:10Z Tooth Position Determination by Automatic Cutting and Marking of Dental Panoramic X-ray Film in Medical Image Processing Huang, Yen-Cheng Chen, Chiung-An Chen, Tsung-Yi Chou, He-Sheng Lin, Wei-Chi Li, Tzu-Chien Yuan, Jia-Jun Lin, Szu-Yin Li, Chun-Wei Chen, Shih-Lun Mao, Yi-Cheng Abu, Patricia Angela R Chiang, Wei-Yuan Lo, Wen-Shen This paper presents a novel method for automatic segmentation of dental X-ray images into single tooth sections and for placing every segmented tooth onto a precise corresponding position table. Moreover, the proposed method automatically determines the tooth’s position in a panoramic X-ray film. The image-processing step incorporates a variety of image-enhancement techniques, including sharpening, histogram equalization, and flat-field correction. Moreover, image processing was implemented iteratively to achieve higher pixel value contrast between the teeth and cavity. The next image-enhancement step is aimed at detecting the teeth cavity and involves determining the segment and points separating the upper and lower jaw, using the difference in pixel values to cut the image into several equal sections and then connecting each cavity feature point to extend a curve that completes the description of the separated jaw. The curve is shifted up and down to look for the gap between the teeth, to identify and address missing teeth and overlapping. Under FDI World Dental Federation notation, the left and right sides receive eight-code sequences to mark each tooth, which provides improved convenience in clinical use. According to the literature, X-ray film cannot be marked correctly when a tooth is missing. This paper utilizes artificial center positioning and sets the teeth gap feature points to have the same count. Then, the gap feature points are connected as a curve with the curve of the jaw to illustrate the dental segmentation. In addition, we incorporate different image-processing methods to sequentially strengthen the X-ray film. The proposed procedure had an 89.95% accuracy rate for tooth positioning. As for the tooth cutting, where the edge of the cutting box is used to determine the position of each tooth number, the accuracy of the tooth positioning method in this proposed study is 92.78%. 2021-12-14T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/discs-faculty-pubs/244 https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1239&context=discs-faculty-pubs Department of Information Systems & Computer Science Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo image processing tooth cutting tooth positioning tooth serial number Computer Engineering Computer Sciences Dentistry
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic image processing
tooth cutting
tooth positioning
tooth serial number
Computer Engineering
Computer Sciences
Dentistry
spellingShingle image processing
tooth cutting
tooth positioning
tooth serial number
Computer Engineering
Computer Sciences
Dentistry
Huang, Yen-Cheng
Chen, Chiung-An
Chen, Tsung-Yi
Chou, He-Sheng
Lin, Wei-Chi
Li, Tzu-Chien
Yuan, Jia-Jun
Lin, Szu-Yin
Li, Chun-Wei
Chen, Shih-Lun
Mao, Yi-Cheng
Abu, Patricia Angela R
Chiang, Wei-Yuan
Lo, Wen-Shen
Tooth Position Determination by Automatic Cutting and Marking of Dental Panoramic X-ray Film in Medical Image Processing
description This paper presents a novel method for automatic segmentation of dental X-ray images into single tooth sections and for placing every segmented tooth onto a precise corresponding position table. Moreover, the proposed method automatically determines the tooth’s position in a panoramic X-ray film. The image-processing step incorporates a variety of image-enhancement techniques, including sharpening, histogram equalization, and flat-field correction. Moreover, image processing was implemented iteratively to achieve higher pixel value contrast between the teeth and cavity. The next image-enhancement step is aimed at detecting the teeth cavity and involves determining the segment and points separating the upper and lower jaw, using the difference in pixel values to cut the image into several equal sections and then connecting each cavity feature point to extend a curve that completes the description of the separated jaw. The curve is shifted up and down to look for the gap between the teeth, to identify and address missing teeth and overlapping. Under FDI World Dental Federation notation, the left and right sides receive eight-code sequences to mark each tooth, which provides improved convenience in clinical use. According to the literature, X-ray film cannot be marked correctly when a tooth is missing. This paper utilizes artificial center positioning and sets the teeth gap feature points to have the same count. Then, the gap feature points are connected as a curve with the curve of the jaw to illustrate the dental segmentation. In addition, we incorporate different image-processing methods to sequentially strengthen the X-ray film. The proposed procedure had an 89.95% accuracy rate for tooth positioning. As for the tooth cutting, where the edge of the cutting box is used to determine the position of each tooth number, the accuracy of the tooth positioning method in this proposed study is 92.78%.
format text
author Huang, Yen-Cheng
Chen, Chiung-An
Chen, Tsung-Yi
Chou, He-Sheng
Lin, Wei-Chi
Li, Tzu-Chien
Yuan, Jia-Jun
Lin, Szu-Yin
Li, Chun-Wei
Chen, Shih-Lun
Mao, Yi-Cheng
Abu, Patricia Angela R
Chiang, Wei-Yuan
Lo, Wen-Shen
author_facet Huang, Yen-Cheng
Chen, Chiung-An
Chen, Tsung-Yi
Chou, He-Sheng
Lin, Wei-Chi
Li, Tzu-Chien
Yuan, Jia-Jun
Lin, Szu-Yin
Li, Chun-Wei
Chen, Shih-Lun
Mao, Yi-Cheng
Abu, Patricia Angela R
Chiang, Wei-Yuan
Lo, Wen-Shen
author_sort Huang, Yen-Cheng
title Tooth Position Determination by Automatic Cutting and Marking of Dental Panoramic X-ray Film in Medical Image Processing
title_short Tooth Position Determination by Automatic Cutting and Marking of Dental Panoramic X-ray Film in Medical Image Processing
title_full Tooth Position Determination by Automatic Cutting and Marking of Dental Panoramic X-ray Film in Medical Image Processing
title_fullStr Tooth Position Determination by Automatic Cutting and Marking of Dental Panoramic X-ray Film in Medical Image Processing
title_full_unstemmed Tooth Position Determination by Automatic Cutting and Marking of Dental Panoramic X-ray Film in Medical Image Processing
title_sort tooth position determination by automatic cutting and marking of dental panoramic x-ray film in medical image processing
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2021
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/discs-faculty-pubs/244
https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1239&context=discs-faculty-pubs
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