Abstract

Fracture burden has created a need to better understand bone repair processes under different pathophysiological states. Evaluation of structural and material properties of the mineralized callus, which is integral to restoring biomechanical stability is, therefore, vital. Microcomputed tomography (micro-CT) can facilitate noninvasive imaging of fracture repair, however, current methods for callus segmentation are only semiautomated, restricted to defined regions, time/labor intensive, and prone to user variation. Herein, we share a new automatic method for segmenting callus in micro-CTtomograms that will allow for objective, quantitative analysis of the bone fracture microarchitecture. Fractured and nonfractured mouse femurs were scanned and processed by both manual and automated segmentation of fracture callus from cortical bone after which microarchitectural parameters were analyzed. All segmentation and analysis steps were performed using CTAn (Bruker) with automatic segmentation performed using the software's image-processing plugins. Results showed automatic segmentation reliably and consistently segmented callus from cortical bone, demonstrating good agreement with manual methods with low bias: tissue volume (TV): -0.320 mm3 , bone volume (BV): 0.0358 mm3 , and bone volume/tissue volume (BV/TV): -3.52%, and was faster and eliminated user-bias and variation. Method scalability and translatability across rodent models were verified in scans of fractured rat femora showing good agreement with manual methods with low bias: TV: -3.654 mm3 , BV: 0.830 mm3 , and BV/TV: 7.81%. Together, these data validate a new automated method for segmentation of callus and cortical bone in micro-CT tomograms that we share as a fast, reliable, and less user-dependent tool for application to study bone callus in fracture, and potentially elsewhere.

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