5,461 research outputs found
Computerized Analysis of Magnetic Resonance Images to Study Cerebral Anatomy in Developing Neonates
The study of cerebral anatomy in developing neonates is of great importance for
the understanding of brain development during the early period of life. This
dissertation therefore focuses on three challenges in the modelling of cerebral
anatomy in neonates during brain development. The methods that have been
developed all use Magnetic Resonance Images (MRI) as source data.
To facilitate study of vascular development in the neonatal period, a set of image
analysis algorithms are developed to automatically extract and model cerebral
vessel trees. The whole process consists of cerebral vessel tracking from
automatically placed seed points, vessel tree generation, and vasculature
registration and matching. These algorithms have been tested on clinical Time-of-
Flight (TOF) MR angiographic datasets.
To facilitate study of the neonatal cortex a complete cerebral cortex segmentation
and reconstruction pipeline has been developed. Segmentation of the neonatal
cortex is not effectively done by existing algorithms designed for the adult brain
because the contrast between grey and white matter is reversed. This causes pixels
containing tissue mixtures to be incorrectly labelled by conventional methods. The
neonatal cortical segmentation method that has been developed is based on a novel
expectation-maximization (EM) method with explicit correction for mislabelled
partial volume voxels. Based on the resulting cortical segmentation, an implicit
surface evolution technique is adopted for the reconstruction of the cortex in
neonates. The performance of the method is investigated by performing a detailed
landmark study.
To facilitate study of cortical development, a cortical surface registration algorithm
for aligning the cortical surface is developed. The method first inflates extracted
cortical surfaces and then performs a non-rigid surface registration using free-form
deformations (FFDs) to remove residual alignment. Validation experiments using
data labelled by an expert observer demonstrate that the method can capture local
changes and follow the growth of specific sulcus
Accurate geometry reconstruction of vascular structures using implicit splines
3-D visualization of blood vessel from standard medical datasets (e.g. CT or MRI) play an important role in many clinical situations, including the diagnosis of vessel stenosis, virtual angioscopy, vascular surgery planning and computer aided vascular surgery. However, unlike other human organs, the vasculature system is a very complex network of vessel, which makes it a very challenging task to perform its 3-D visualization. Conventional techniques of medical volume data visualization are in general not well-suited for the above-mentioned tasks. This problem can be solved by reconstructing vascular geometry. Although various methods have been proposed for reconstructing vascular structures, most of these approaches are model-based, and are usually too ideal to correctly represent the actual variation presented by the cross-sections of a vascular structure. In addition, the underlying shape is usually expressed as polygonal meshes or in parametric forms, which is very inconvenient for implementing ramification of branching. As a result, the reconstructed geometries are not suitable for computer aided diagnosis and computer guided minimally invasive vascular surgery. In this research, we develop a set of techniques associated with the geometry reconstruction of vasculatures, including segmentation, modelling, reconstruction, exploration and rendering of vascular structures. The reconstructed geometry can not only help to greatly enhance the visual quality of 3-D vascular structures, but also provide an actual geometric representation of vasculatures, which can provide various benefits. The key findings of this research are as follows: 1. A localized hybrid level-set method of segmentation has been developed to extract the vascular structures from 3-D medical datasets. 2. A skeleton-based implicit modelling technique has been proposed and applied to the reconstruction of vasculatures, which can achieve an accurate geometric reconstruction of the vascular structures as implicit surfaces in an analytical form. 3. An accelerating technique using modern GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) is devised and applied to rendering the implicitly represented vasculatures. 4. The implicitly modelled vasculature is investigated for the application of virtual angioscopy
Vessel tractography using an intensity based tensor model with branch detection
In this paper, we present a tubular structure seg- mentation method that utilizes a second order tensor constructed from directional intensity measurements, which is inspired from diffusion tensor image (DTI) modeling. The constructed anisotropic tensor which is fit inside a vessel drives the segmen- tation analogously to a tractography approach in DTI. Our model is initialized at a single seed point and is capable of capturing whole vessel trees by an automatic branch detection algorithm developed in the same framework. The centerline of the vessel as well as its thickness is extracted. Performance results within the Rotterdam Coronary Artery Algorithm Evaluation framework are provided for comparison with existing techniques. 96.4% average overlap with ground truth delineated by experts is obtained in addition to other measures reported in the paper. Moreover, we demonstrate further quantitative results over synthetic vascular datasets, and we provide quantitative experiments for branch detection on patient Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA) volumes, as well as qualitative evaluations on the same CTA datasets, from visual scores by a cardiologist expert
High-performance geometric vascular modelling
Image-based high-performance geometric vascular modelling and reconstruction is an essential component of computer-assisted surgery on the diagnosis, analysis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases. However, it is an extremely challenging task to efficiently reconstruct the accurate geometric structures of blood vessels out of medical images. For one thing, the shape of an individual section of a blood vessel is highly irregular because of the squeeze of other tissues and the deformation caused by vascular diseases. For another, a vascular system is a very complicated network of blood vessels with different types of branching structures. Although some existing vascular modelling techniques can reconstruct the geometric structure of a vascular system, they are either time-consuming or lacking sufficient accuracy. What is more, these techniques rarely consider the interior tissue of the vascular wall, which consists of complicated layered structures. As a result, it is necessary to develop a better vascular geometric modelling technique, which is not only of high performance and high accuracy in the reconstruction of vascular surfaces, but can also be used to model the interior tissue structures of the vascular walls.This research aims to develop a state-of-the-art patient-specific medical image-based geometric vascular modelling technique to solve the above problems. The main contributions of this research are:- Developed and proposed the Skeleton Marching technique to reconstruct the geometric structures of blood vessels with high performance and high accuracy. With the proposed technique, the highly complicated vascular reconstruction task is reduced to a set of simple localised geometric reconstruction tasks, which can be carried out in a parallel manner. These locally reconstructed vascular geometric segments are then combined together using shape-preserving blending operations to faithfully represent the geometric shape of the whole vascular system.- Developed and proposed the Thin Implicit Patch method to realistically model the interior geometric structures of the vascular tissues. This method allows the multi-layer interior tissue structures to be embedded inside the vascular wall to illustrate the geometric details of the blood vessel in real world
Accurate geometry modeling of vasculatures using implicit fitting with 2D radial basis functions
Accurate vascular geometry modeling is an essential task in computer assisted vascular surgery and therapy. This paper presents a vessel cross-section based implicit vascular modeling technique, which represents a vascular surface as a set of locally fitted implicit surfaces. In the proposed method, a cross-section based technique is employed to extract from each cross-section of the vascular surface a set of points, which are then fitted with an implicit curve represented as 2D radial basis functions. All these implicitly represented cross-section curves are then being considered as 3D cylindrical objects and combined together using a certain partial shape-preserving spline to build a complete vessel branch; different vessel branches are then blended using a extended smooth maximum function to construct the complete vascular tree. Experimental results show that the proposed method can correctly represent the morphology and topology of vascular structures with high level of smoothness. Both qualitative comparison with other methods and quantitative validations to the proposed method have been performed to verify the accuracy and smoothness of the generated vascular geometric models
Feature Lines for Illustrating Medical Surface Models: Mathematical Background and Survey
This paper provides a tutorial and survey for a specific kind of illustrative
visualization technique: feature lines. We examine different feature line
methods. For this, we provide the differential geometry behind these concepts
and adapt this mathematical field to the discrete differential geometry. All
discrete differential geometry terms are explained for triangulated surface
meshes. These utilities serve as basis for the feature line methods. We provide
the reader with all knowledge to re-implement every feature line method.
Furthermore, we summarize the methods and suggest a guideline for which kind of
surface which feature line algorithm is best suited. Our work is motivated by,
but not restricted to, medical and biological surface models.Comment: 33 page
The optimal connection model for blood vessels segmentation and the MEA-Net
Vascular diseases have long been regarded as a significant health concern.
Accurately detecting the location, shape, and afflicted regions of blood
vessels from a diverse range of medical images has proven to be a major
challenge. Obtaining blood vessels that retain their correct topological
structures is currently a crucial research issue. Numerous efforts have sought
to reinforce neural networks' learning of vascular geometric features,
including measures to ensure the correct topological structure of the
segmentation result's vessel centerline. Typically, these methods extract
topological features from the network's segmentation result and then apply
regular constraints to reinforce the accuracy of critical components and the
overall topological structure. However, as blood vessels are three-dimensional
structures, it is essential to achieve complete local vessel segmentation,
which necessitates enhancing the segmentation of vessel boundaries.
Furthermore, current methods are limited to handling 2D blood vessel
fragmentation cases. Our proposed boundary attention module directly extracts
boundary voxels from the network's segmentation result. Additionally, we have
established an optimal connection model based on minimal surfaces to determine
the connection order between blood vessels. Our method achieves
state-of-the-art performance in 3D multi-class vascular segmentation tasks, as
evidenced by the high values of Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC) and
Normalized Surface Dice (NSD) metrics. Furthermore, our approach improves the
Betti error, LR error, and BR error indicators of vessel richness and
structural integrity by more than 10% compared to other methods, and
effectively addresses vessel fragmentation and yields blood vessels with a more
precise topological structure.Comment: 19 page
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