Abstract

Replacing the humeral head with an artificial one via surgery is one of the options to treat glenohumeral osteoarthritis. Thus, designing the artificial humeral head is an important step to alter clinical outcomes. In order to design the artificial humeral head, the individual variety of the humeral heads should be investigated. The statistical shape model (SSM) has been attracting considerable attention to grasp 3-D shape variety; however, no method to derive the SSM of humeral heads has been studied. This paper proposes a method to construct an SSM of humeral heads based on the anatomical landmarks in shoulder computed tomography (CT) images. The proposed method consists of three steps: humeral head extraction, position and pose alignment, and finally, principle component analysis. The method was applied to 22 male subjects with leave-one-out cross validation. The proposed method obtained an average Dice coefficient of 0.92 to represent the individual shape using the constructed SSM. According to shape analysis of the humeral head, we found that the thickness of the humeral head was associated with individual characteristics of the humeral head. Therefore, it can be said that this study can provide patient-specific design of an artificial humeral head.

Highlights

  • Osteoarthritis has a negative impact on daily activities for millions of elderly people around the world [1,2]

  • This study involved a total of 22 subjects, as described earlier in the materials section

  • This study proposed a method to construct a humeral head statistical shape model (SSM)

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Summary

Introduction

Osteoarthritis has a negative impact on daily activities for millions of elderly people around the world [1,2]. The breakdown of cartilage causes the humeral head and glenoid to rub and grind against each other [3]. It induces acute pain and loss of function, i.e., mobility of the arm [2]. To compensate for the cartilage breakdown, excess cells are produced in the humeral head in the form of bone spurs. This leads to even more friction, pain, and limiting of function. The design of an artificial humeral head is likely to alter the surgical outcome for glenohumeral joint osteoarthritis. Research studies showed that artificial humeral head design with some kind approximation

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