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Deep learning for cardiac image segmentation: A review
Deep learning has become the most widely used approach for cardiac image segmentation in recent years. In this paper, we provide a review of over 100 cardiac image segmentation papers using deep learning, which covers common imaging modalities including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), and ultrasound (US) and major anatomical structures of interest (ventricles, atria and vessels). In addition, a summary of publicly available cardiac image datasets and code repositories are included to provide a base for encouraging reproducible research. Finally, we discuss the challenges and limitations with current deep learning-based approaches (scarcity of labels, model generalizability across different domains, interpretability) and suggest potential directions for future research
From 4D medical images (CT, MRI, and Ultrasound) to 4D structured mesh models of the left ventricular endocardium for patient-specific simulations
With cardiovascular disease (CVD) remaining the primary cause of death worldwide, early detection of CVDs becomes essential. The intracardiac flow is an important component of ventricular function, motion kinetics, wash-out of ventricular chambers, and ventricular energetics. Coupling between Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations and medical images can play a fundamental role in terms of patient-specific diagnostic tools. From a technical perspective, CFD simulations with moving boundaries could easily lead to negative volumes errors and the sudden failure of the simulation. The generation of high-quality 4D meshes (3D in space + time) with 1-to-l vertex becomes essential to perform a CFD simulation with moving boundaries. In this context, we developed a semiautomatic morphing tool able to create 4D high-quality structured meshes starting from a segmented 4D dataset. To prove the versatility and efficiency, the method was tested on three different 4D datasets (Ultrasound, MRI, and CT) by evaluating the quality and accuracy of the resulting 4D meshes. Furthermore, an estimation of some physiological quantities is accomplished for the 4D CT reconstruction. Future research will aim at extending the region of interest, further automation of the meshing algorithm, and generating structured hexahedral mesh models both for the blood and myocardial volume
Automatic segmentation of the left ventricle cavity and myocardium in MRI data
A novel approach for the automatic segmentation has been developed to extract the epi-cardium and endo-cardium boundaries of the left ventricle (lv) of the heart. The developed segmentation scheme takes multi-slice and multi-phase magnetic resonance (MR) images of the heart, transversing the short-axis length from the base to the apex. Each image is taken at one instance in the heart's phase. The images are segmented using a diffusion-based filter followed by an unsupervised clustering technique and the resulting labels are checked to locate the (lv) cavity. From cardiac anatomy, the closest pool of blood to the lv cavity is the right ventricle cavity. The wall between these two blood-pools (interventricular septum) is measured to give an approximate thickness for the myocardium. This value is used when a radial search is performed on a gradient image to find appropriate robust segments of the epi-cardium boundary. The robust edge segments are then joined using a normal spline curve. Experimental results are presented with very encouraging qualitative and quantitative results and a comparison is made against the state-of-the art level-sets method
Automated segmentation on the entire cardiac cycle using a deep learning work-flow
The segmentation of the left ventricle (LV) from CINE MRI images is essential
to infer important clinical parameters. Typically, machine learning algorithms
for automated LV segmentation use annotated contours from only two cardiac
phases, diastole, and systole. In this work, we present an analysis work-flow
for fully-automated LV segmentation that learns from images acquired through
the cardiac cycle. The workflow consists of three components: first, for each
image in the sequence, we perform an automated localization and subsequent
cropping of the bounding box containing the cardiac silhouette. Second, we
identify the LV contours using a Temporal Fully Convolutional Neural Network
(T-FCNN), which extends Fully Convolutional Neural Networks (FCNN) through a
recurrent mechanism enforcing temporal coherence across consecutive frames.
Finally, we further defined the boundaries using either one of two components:
fully-connected Conditional Random Fields (CRFs) with Gaussian edge potentials
and Semantic Flow. Our initial experiments suggest that significant improvement
in performance can potentially be achieved by using a recurrent neural network
component that explicitly learns cardiac motion patterns whilst performing LV
segmentation.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, published on IEEE Xplor
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State of the Art of Level Set Methods in Segmentation and Registration of Medical Imaging Modalities
Segmentation of medical images is an important step in various applications such as visualization, quantitative analysis and image-guided surgery. Numerous segmentation methods have been developed in the past two decades for extraction of organ contours on medical images. Low-level segmentation methods, such as pixel-based clustering, region growing, and filter-based edge detection, require additional pre-processing and post-processing as well as considerable amounts of expert intervention or information of the objects of interest. Furthermore the subsequent analysis of segmented objects is hampered by the primitive, pixel or voxel level representations from those region-based segmentation. Deformable models, on the other hand, provide an explicit representation of the boundary and the shape of the object. They combine several desirable features such as inherent connectivity and smoothness, which counteract noise and boundary irregularities, as well as the ability to incorporate knowledge about the object of interest. However, parametric deformable models have two main limitations. First, in situations where the initial model and desired object boundary differ greatly in size and shape, the model must be re-parameterized dynamically to faithfully recover the object boundary. The second limitation is that it has difficulty dealing with topological adaptation such as splitting or merging model parts, a useful property for recovering either multiple objects or objects with unknown topology. This difficulty is caused by the fact that a new parameterization must be constructed whenever topology change occurs, which requires sophisticated schemes. Level set deformable models, also referred to as geometric deformable models, provide an elegant solution to address the primary limitations of parametric deformable models. These methods have drawn a great deal of attention since their introduction in 1988. Advantages of the contour implicit formulation of the deformable model over parametric formulation include: (1) no parameterization of the contour, (2) topological flexibility, (3) good numerical stability, (4) straightforward extension of the 2D formulation to n-D. Recent reviews on the subject include papers from Suri. In this chapter we give a general overview of the level set segmentation methods with emphasize on new frameworks recently introduced in the context of medical imaging problems. We then introduce novel approaches that aim at combining segmentation and registration in a level set formulation. Finally we review a selective set of clinical works with detailed validation of the level set methods for several clinical applications
Fast and robust hybrid framework for infant brain classification from structural MRI : a case study for early diagnosis of autism.
The ultimate goal of this work is to develop a computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) system for early autism diagnosis from infant structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The vital step to achieve this goal is to get accurate segmentation of the different brain structures: whitematter, graymatter, and cerebrospinal fluid, which will be the main focus of this thesis. The proposed brain classification approach consists of two major steps. First, the brain is extracted based on the integration of a stochastic model that serves to learn the visual appearance of the brain texture, and a geometric model that preserves the brain geometry during the extraction process. Secondly, the brain tissues are segmented based on shape priors, built using a subset of co-aligned training images, that is adapted during the segmentation process using first- and second-order visual appearance features of infant MRIs. The accuracy of the presented segmentation approach has been tested on 300 infant subjects and evaluated blindly on 15 adult subjects. The experimental results have been evaluated by the MICCAI MR Brain Image Segmentation (MRBrainS13) challenge organizers using three metrics: Dice coefficient, 95-percentile Hausdorff distance, and absolute volume difference. The proposed method has been ranked the first in terms of performance and speed
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