Abstract

The healing of bone fractures is a complex and well-orchestrated physiological process, but normal healing is compromised when the fracture is large. These large non-union fractures often require a template with surgical intervention for healing. The standard treatment, autografting, has drawbacks such as donor site pain and limited availability. Biodegradable scaffolds developed using biomaterials such as bioactive glass are a potential solution. Investigation of bone ingrowth into biodegradable scaffolds is an important aspect of their development. Micro-CT (μ-CT) imaging is widely used to evaluate and quantify tissue ingrowth into scaffolds in 3D. Existing segmentation techniques have low accuracy in differentiating bone and scaffold, and need improvements to accurately quantify the bone in-growth into the scaffold using μ-CT scans. This study proposes a novel 3-stage pipeline for better outcome. The first stage of the pipeline is based on a convolutional neural network for the segmentation of the scaffold, bone, and pores from μ-CT images to investigate bone ingrowth. A 3D rigid image registration procedure was employed in the next stage to extract the volume of interest (VOI) for the analysis. In the final stage, algorithms were developed to quantitatively analyze bone ingrowth and scaffold degradation. The best model for segmentation produced a dice similarity coefficient score of 90.1, intersection over union score of 83.9, and pixel accuracy of 93.1 for unseen test data.

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