2,783 research outputs found

    Inferring Geodesic Cerebrovascular Graphs: Image Processing, Topological Alignment and Biomarkers Extraction

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    A vectorial representation of the vascular network that embodies quantitative features - location, direction, scale, and bifurcations - has many potential neuro-vascular applications. Patient-specific models support computer-assisted surgical procedures in neurovascular interventions, while analyses on multiple subjects are essential for group-level studies on which clinical prediction and therapeutic inference ultimately depend. This first motivated the development of a variety of methods to segment the cerebrovascular system. Nonetheless, a number of limitations, ranging from data-driven inhomogeneities, the anatomical intra- and inter-subject variability, the lack of exhaustive ground-truth, the need for operator-dependent processing pipelines, and the highly non-linear vascular domain, still make the automatic inference of the cerebrovascular topology an open problem. In this thesis, brain vessels’ topology is inferred by focusing on their connectedness. With a novel framework, the brain vasculature is recovered from 3D angiographies by solving a connectivity-optimised anisotropic level-set over a voxel-wise tensor field representing the orientation of the underlying vasculature. Assuming vessels joining by minimal paths, a connectivity paradigm is formulated to automatically determine the vascular topology as an over-connected geodesic graph. Ultimately, deep-brain vascular structures are extracted with geodesic minimum spanning trees. The inferred topologies are then aligned with similar ones for labelling and propagating information over a non-linear vectorial domain, where the branching pattern of a set of vessels transcends a subject-specific quantized grid. Using a multi-source embedding of a vascular graph, the pairwise registration of topologies is performed with the state-of-the-art graph matching techniques employed in computer vision. Functional biomarkers are determined over the neurovascular graphs with two complementary approaches. Efficient approximations of blood flow and pressure drop account for autoregulation and compensation mechanisms in the whole network in presence of perturbations, using lumped-parameters analog-equivalents from clinical angiographies. Also, a localised NURBS-based parametrisation of bifurcations is introduced to model fluid-solid interactions by means of hemodynamic simulations using an isogeometric analysis framework, where both geometry and solution profile at the interface share the same homogeneous domain. Experimental results on synthetic and clinical angiographies validated the proposed formulations. Perspectives and future works are discussed for the group-wise alignment of cerebrovascular topologies over a population, towards defining cerebrovascular atlases, and for further topological optimisation strategies and risk prediction models for therapeutic inference. Most of the algorithms presented in this work are available as part of the open-source package VTrails

    Accurate Segmentation of Cerebrovasculature from TOF-MRA Images Using Appearance Descriptors

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    © 2013 IEEE. Analyzing cerebrovascular changes can significantly lead to not only detecting the presence of serious diseases e.g., hypertension and dementia, but also tracking their progress. Such analysis could be better performed using Time-of-Flight Magnetic Resonance Angiography (ToF-MRA) images, but this requires accurate segmentation of the cerebral vasculature from the surroundings. To achieve this goal, we propose a fully automated cerebral vasculature segmentation approach based on extracting both prior and current appearance features that have the ability to capture the appearance of macro and micro-vessels in ToF-MRA. The appearance prior is modeled with a novel translation and rotation invariant Markov-Gibbs Random Field (MGRF) of voxel intensities with pairwise interaction analytically identified from a set of training data sets. The appearance of the cerebral vasculature is also represented with a marginal probability distribution of voxel intensities by using a Linear Combination of Discrete Gaussians (LCDG) that its parameters are estimated by using a modified Expectation-Maximization (EM) algorithm. The extracted appearance features are separable and can be classified by any classifier, as demonstrated by our segmentation results. To validate the accuracy of our algorithm, we tested the proposed approach on in-vivo data using 270 data sets, which were qualitatively validated by a neuroradiology expert. The results were quantitatively validated using the three commonly used metrics for segmentation evaluation: the Dice coefficient, the modified Hausdorff distance, and the absolute volume difference. The proposed approach showed a higher accuracy compared to two of the existing segmentation approaches

    A novel MRA-based framework for the detection of changes in cerebrovascular blood pressure.

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    Background: High blood pressure (HBP) affects 75 million adults and is the primary or contributing cause of mortality in 410,000 adults each year in the United States. Chronic HBP leads to cerebrovascular changes and is a significant contributor for strokes, dementia, and cognitive impairment. Non-invasive measurement of changes in cerebral vasculature and blood pressure (BP) may enable physicians to optimally treat HBP patients. This manuscript describes a method to non-invasively quantify changes in cerebral vasculature and BP using Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) imaging. Methods: MRA images and BP measurements were obtained from patients (n=15, M=8, F=7, Age= 49.2 ± 7.3 years) over a span of 700 days. A novel segmentation algorithm was developed to identify brain vasculature from surrounding tissue. The data was processed to calculate the vascular probability distribution function (PDF); a measure of the vascular diameters in the brain. The initial (day 0) PDF and final (day 700) PDF were used to correlate the changes in cerebral vasculature and BP. Correlation was determined by a mixed effects linear model analysis. Results: The segmentation algorithm had a 99.9% specificity and 99.7% sensitivity in identifying and delineating cerebral vasculature. The PDFs had a statistically significant correlation to BP changes below the circle of Willis (p-value = 0.0007), but not significant (p-value = 0.53) above the circle of Willis, due to smaller blood vessels. Conclusion: Changes in cerebral vasculature and pressure can be non-invasively obtained through MRA image analysis, which may be a useful tool for clinicians to optimize medical management of HBP

    Cerebrovascular segmentation from MRA images

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    There is provided a method of processing a cerebrovascular medical image, the method comprising receiving magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) image associated with a cerebrovascular tissue comprising blood vessels and brain tissues other than blood vessels; segmenting MRA image using a prior appearance model for generating first prior appearance features representing a first-order prior appearance model and second appearance features representing a second-order prior appearance model of the cerebrovascular tissue, wherein current appearance model comprises a 3D Markov-Gibbs Random Field (MGRF) having a 2D rotational and translational symmetry such that MGRF model is 2D rotation and translation invariant; segmenting MRA image using current appearance model for generating current appearance features distinguishing blood vessels from other brain tissues; adjusting MRA image using first and second prior appearance features and current appearance futures; and generating an enhanced MRA image based on said adjustment. There is also provided a system for doing the same. Application US16/159,790 events 2018-10-15 Application filed by Zayed University 2018-10-15 Priority to US16/159,790 2018-10-15 Assigned to Zayed University 2020-04-16 Publication of US20200116808A1 2020-09-08 Application granted 2020-09-08 Publication of US10768259B2 Status Active 2039-03-02 Adjusted expiratio

    Vessel enhancing diffusion: a scale space representation of vessel

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    A method is proposed to enhance vascular structures within the framework of scale space theory. We combine a smooth vessel filter which is based on a geometrical analysis of the Hessian's eigensystem, with a non-linear anisotropic diffusion scheme. The amount and orientation of diffusion depend on the local vessel likeliness. Vessel enhancing diffusion (VED) is applied to patient and phantom data and compared to linear, regularized Perona-Malik, edge and coherence enhancing diffusion. The method performs better than most of the existing techniques in visualizing vessels with varying radii and in enhancing vessel appearance. A diameter study on phantom data shows that VED least affects the accuracy of diameter measurements. It is shown that using VED as a preprocessing step improves level set based segmentation of the cerebral vasculature, in particular segmentation of the smaller vessels of the vasculature

    Intracranial fluids dynamics: a quantitative evaluation by means of phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging

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    El volumen intracraneal lo integran el volumen de líquido cefalorraquídeo (LCR), el de la sangre y el del parénquima cerebral. La entrada de sangre al cráneo en la sístole incrementa el volumen intracraneal. Según la ley de Monroe-Kellie debe ocurrir una descompensación en los volúmenes restantes para mantener constante el volumen total. Los desequilibrios que se producen en este proceso de la homeostasis cerebral se han asociado tanto a enfermedades neurodegenerativas como a cerebrovasculares. Por tanto, es necesario contar con metodologías adecuadas para analizar la dinámica de los fluidos intracraneales (LCR y sangre). Las secuencias dinámicas de resonancia magnética en contraste de fase (RM-CF) con sincronismo cardíaco permiten cuantificar el flujo de LCR y de sangre durante un ciclo cardíaco. La medición de flujo mediante secuencias de RM-CF es precisa y reproducible siempre que se use un protocolo de adquisición adecuado. La reproducibilidad y exactitud de las medidas dependen también del uso de técnicas adecuadas de posproceso que permitan segmentar las regiones de interés (ROI) independientemente del operador y admitan corregir los errores de fondo introducidos por la supresión imperfecta de las corrientes inducidas y la contribución a la señal de los pequeños movimientos que presenta el mesencéfalo por la transmisión del pulso vascular así como el submuestreo (aliasing), reflejado como un cambio abrupto y opuesto del sentido original del flujo. Estas técnicas de análisis deben también tener en cuenta los errores relacionados con el efecto de volumen parcial (EVP), causado por la presencia de tejido estacionario y de flujo en el interior de los vóxeles de la periferia de la región a estudiar El objetivo principal de esta tesis es desarrollar una metodología reproducible para evaluar cuantitativamente la dinámica de los fluidos intracraneales dentro de espacios de LCR (acueducto de Silvio, cisterna prepontina y espacio perimedular C2C3) y principales vaFlórez Ordóñez, YN. (2009). Intracranial fluids dynamics: a quantitative evaluation by means of phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging [Tesis doctoral no publicada]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/6029Palanci

    Innovative MRI techniques in neuroimaging approaches for cerebrovascular diseases and vascular cognitive impairment

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    Cognitive impairment and dementia are recognized as major threats to public health. Many studies have shown the important role played by challenges to the cerebral vasculature and the neurovascular unit. To investigate the structural and functional characteristics of the brain, MRI has proven an invaluable tool for visualizing the internal organs of patients and analyzing the parameters related to neuronal activation and blood flow in vivo. Different strategies of imaging can be combined to obtain various parameters: (i) measures of cortical and subcortical structures (cortical thickness, subcortical structures volume); (ii) evaluation of microstructural characteristics of the white matter (fractional anisotropy, mean diffusivity); (iii) neuronal activation and synchronicity to identify functional networks across different regions (functional connectivity between specific regions, graph measures of specific nodes); and (iv) structure of the cerebral vasculature and its efficacy in irrorating the brain (main vessel diameter, cerebral perfusion). The high amount of data obtainable from multi-modal sources calls for methods of advanced analysis, like machine-learning algorithms that allow the discrimination of the most informative features, to comprehensively characterize the cerebrovascular network into specific and sensitive biomarkers. By using the same techniques of human imaging in pre-clinical research, we can also investigate the mechanisms underlying the pathophysiological alterations identified in patients by imaging, with the chance of looking for molecular mechanisms to recover the pathology or hamper its progression
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