71 research outputs found

    Accurate methods for manually marking retinal vessel widths

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    This paper compares two manual measurement techniques for measuring retinal vessel segment widths: the kick-points technique and the edge marking technique. An image set of 164 clear, high-resolution segments was used. The kick-points approach uses kick points marked by observers along interpolated cross-sectional intensity profile graphs; the edge marking method allows observers to nominate the edges on a zoomed-up image, and interpolates edge positions. The edgemarking method provides more precise measurements than the kick-points method, but these are subject to more inter-observer variability; we speculate that this result is due to differing observer perceptions of the edge location

    Object-Based 3-D Reconstruction of Arterial Trees from Magnetic Resonance Angiograms

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    By exploiting a priori knowledge of arterial shape and smoothness, subpixel accuracy reconstructions are achieved from only four noisy projection images. The method incorporates a priori knowledge of the structure of branching arteries into a natural optimality criterion that encompasses the entire arterial tree. An efficient optimization algorithm for object estimation is presented, and its performance on simulated, phantom, and in vivo magnetic resonance angiograms is demonstrated. It is shown that accurate reconstruction of bifurcations is achievable with parametric models.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/85841/1/Fessler111.pd

    Computer Vision Techniques for Transcatheter Intervention

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    Minimally invasive transcatheter technologies have demonstrated substantial promise for the diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases. For example, TAVI is an alternative to AVR for the treatment of severe aortic stenosis and TAFA is widely used for the treatment and cure of atrial fibrillation. In addition, catheter-based IVUS and OCT imaging of coronary arteries provides important information about the coronary lumen, wall and plaque characteristics. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of these cross-sectional image data will be beneficial for the evaluation and treatment of coronary artery diseases such as atherosclerosis. In all the phases (preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative) during the transcatheter intervention procedure, computer vision techniques (e.g., image segmentation, motion tracking) have been largely applied in the field to accomplish tasks like annulus measurement, valve selection, catheter placement control, and vessel centerline extraction. This provides beneficial guidance for the clinicians in surgical planning, disease diagnosis, and treatment assessment. In this paper, we present a systematical review on these state-of-the-art methods.We aim to give a comprehensive overview for researchers in the area of computer vision on the subject of transcatheter intervention. Research in medical computing is multi-disciplinary due to its nature, and hence it is important to understand the application domain, clinical background, and imaging modality so that methods and quantitative measurements derived from analyzing the imaging data are appropriate and meaningful. We thus provide an overview on background information of transcatheter intervention procedures, as well as a review of the computer vision techniques and methodologies applied in this area

    Automated Detection of Vessel Abnormalities on Fluorescein Angiogram in Malarial Retinopathy

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    The detection and assessment of intravascular filling defects is important, because they may represent a process central to cerebral malaria pathogenesis: neurovascular sequestration. We have developed and validated a framework that can automatically detect intravascular filling defects in fluorescein angiogram images. It first employs a state-of-the-art segmentation approach to extract the vessels from images and then divide them into individual segments by geometrical analysis. A feature vector based on the intensity and shape of saliency maps is generated to represent the level of abnormality of each vessel segment. An AdaBoost classifier with weighted cost coefficient is trained to classify the vessel segments into normal and abnormal categories. To demonstrate its effectiveness, we apply this framework to 6,358 vessel segments in images from 10 patients with malarial retinopathy. The test sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and area under curve (AUC) are 74.7%, 73.5%, 74.1% and 74.2% respectively when compared to the reference standard of human expert manual annotations. This performance is comparable to the agreement that we find between human observers of intravascular filling defects. Our method will be a powerful new tool for studying malarial retinopathy

    Quantitative image analysis in cardiac CT angiography

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    Quantitative image analysis in cardiac CT angiography

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    Recalage préservant la topologie des vaisseaux: application à la cardiologie interventionnelle

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    In percutaneous coronary interventions, integrating into the live fluoroscopic image vessel calcifications and occlusion information that are revealed in the pre-operative Computed Tomography Angiography can greatly improve guidance of the clinician. Fusing pre- and intra-operative information into a single space aims at taking advantage of two complementary modalities and requires a step of registration that must provide good alignment and relevant correspondences between them. Most of the existing 3D/2D vessel registration algorithms do not take into account the particular topology of the vasculature to be matched, resulting into pairings that may be topologically inconsistent along the vasculature.A first contribution consisted in a registration framework dedicated to curve matching, denoted the Iterative Closest Curve (ICC). Its main feature is to preserve the topological consistency along curves by taking advantage of the Frechet distance that not only computes the distance between two curves but also builds ordered pairings along them. A second contribution is a pairing procedure designed for the matching of a vascular tree structure that endorses its particular topology and that can easily take advantage of the ICC-framework. Centerlines of the 3D tree are matched to curves extracted from the 2D vascular graph while preserving the connectivity at 3D bifurcations. The matching criterion used to build the pairings takes into account the geometric distance and the resemblance between curves both based on a global formulation using the Frechet distance.To evaluate our approach we run experiments on a database composed of 63 clinical cases, measuring accuracy on real conditions and robustness with respect to a simulated displacement. Quantitative results have been obtained using two complementary measures that aim at assessing the results both geometrically and topologically, and quantify the resulting alignment error as well as the pairing error. The proposed method exhibits good results both in terms of pairing and alignment and demonstrates to be low sensitive to the rotations to be compensated (up to 30 degrees).Cette thĂšse s’inscrit dans le cadre de la cardiologie interventionnelle. IntĂ©grer des informations telles que la position des calcifications ainsi que la taille et forme d’une occlusion dans les images fluoroscopiques constituerait un bĂ©nĂ©fice pour le praticien. Ces informations, invisibles dans les images rayons-X pendant la procĂ©dure, sont prĂ©sentes au sein du scanner CT prĂ©opĂ©ratoire. La fusion de cette modalitĂ© avec la fluoroscopie apporterait une aide prĂ©cieuse au guidage temps rĂ©el des outils interventionnels en bĂ©nĂ©ficiant des informations fournies par le CT. Cette fusion requiert une Ă©tape de recalage qui vise Ă  aligner au mieux les deux modalitĂ©s et fournir des correspondances pertinentes entre elles. La plupart des algorithmes de recalage 3D/2D de vaisseaux rencontrent des difficultĂ©s Ă  construire des appariements anatomiquement pertinents, essentiellement Ă  cause du manque de cohĂ©rence topologique le long du rĂ©seau vasculaire.Afin de rĂ©soudre ce problĂšme, nous proposons dans cette thĂšse un cadre gĂ©nĂ©rique pour le recalage de structures curvilinĂ©aires. L’algorithme qui en dĂ©coule prĂ©serve la structure des courbes appariĂ©es. Les artĂšres coronaires pouvant ĂȘtre reprĂ©sentĂ©es par un ensemble de courbes arrangĂ©es en arbre, nous proposons aussi une procĂ©dure d’appariement qui respecte cette structure. Le recalage d’un arbre 3D sur un graphe 2D est ainsi rĂ©alisĂ© en assurant la prĂ©servation des connectivitĂ©s aux bifurcations. Le choix de l’appariement est basĂ© sur un critĂšre prenant en compte la distance gĂ©omĂ©trique ainsi que la ressemblance entre courbes. Ce critĂšre est Ă©valuĂ© grĂące Ă  une forme modifiĂ©e de la distance de FrĂ©chet.Une base de donnĂ©es de 63 cas cliniques a Ă©tĂ© utilisĂ©e Ă  travers diffĂ©rentes expĂ©riences afin de prouver la robustesse et la prĂ©cision de notre approche. Nous avons proposĂ© deux mesures complĂ©mentaires visant Ă  quantifier la qualitĂ© de l’alignement d’une part et des appariements engendrĂ©s d’autre part. La mĂ©thode proposĂ©e se montre prĂ©cise pour les alignements de la projection du modĂšle CT et des artĂšres coronaires observĂ©es dans les images angiographiques. De plus, les appariements obtenus sont anatomiquement pertinents et lĂĄlgorithme a prouvĂ© sa robustesse face aux perturbations de la position initiale. Nous attribuons cette robustesse Ă  la qualitĂ© des appariements construits au fur et Ă  mesure des itĂ©rations

    Coronary atherosclerosis:biomechanics and imaging

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    Coronary atherosclerosis:biomechanics and imaging

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