4 research outputs found

    Coronary Artery Calcium Quantification in Contrast-enhanced Computed Tomography Angiography

    Get PDF
    Coronary arteries are the blood vessels supplying oxygen-rich blood to the heart muscles. Coronary artery calcium (CAC), which is the total amount of calcium deposited in these arteries, indicates the presence or the future risk of coronary artery diseases. Quantification of CAC is done by using computed tomography (CT) scan which uses attenuation of x-ray by different tissues in the body to generate three-dimensional images. Calcium can be easily spotted in the CT images because of its higher opacity to x-ray compared to that of the surrounding tissue. However, the arteries cannot be identified easily in the CT images. Therefore, a second scan is done after injecting a patient with an x-ray opaque dye known as contrast material which makes different chambers of the heart and the coronary arteries visible in the CT scan. This procedure is known as computed tomography angiography (CTA) and is performed to assess the morphology of the arteries in order to rule out any blockage in the arteries. The CT scan done without the use of contrast material (non-contrast-enhanced CT) can be eliminated if the calcium can be quantified accurately from the CTA images. However, identification of calcium in CTA images is difficult because of the proximity of the calcium and the contrast material and their overlapping intensity range. In this dissertation first we compare the calcium quantification by using a state-of-the-art non-contrast-enhanced CT scan method to conventional methods suggesting optimal quantification parameters. Then we develop methods to accurately quantify calcium from the CTA images. The methods include novel algorithms for extracting centerline of an artery, calculating the threshold of calcium adaptively based on the intensity of contrast along the artery, calculating the amount of calcium in mixed intensity range, and segmenting the artery and the outer wall. The accuracy of the calcium quantification from CTA by using our methods is higher than the non-contrast-enhanced CT thus potentially eliminating the need of the non-contrast-enhanced CT scan. The implications are that the total time required for the CT scan procedure, and the patient\u27s exposure to x-ray radiation are reduced

    Comparative study of clustering algorithms in order to virtual histology (VH) image segmentation

    Get PDF
    Atherosclerosis is the deadliest type of heart disease caused by soft or “vulnerable” plaque (VP) formation in the coronary arteries. Recently, Virtual Histology (VH) has been proposed based on spectral analysis of Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) provides color code of coronary tissue maps. Based on pathophysiological studies, obtaining information about existence and extension of confluent pool’s component inside plaque is important. In addition, plaque components’ localization respect to the luminal border has major role in determining plaque vulnerability and plaque–stent interaction. Computational methods were applied to prognostic the pattern's structure of each component inside the plaque. The first step for post-processing of VH methodology to get further information of geometrical features is segmentation or decomposition. The medical imaging segmentation field has developed to assist cardiologist and radiologists and reduce human error in recent years as well. To perform color image clustering, several strategies can be applied which include traditional hierarchical and nonhierarchical. In this paper, we applied and compared four nonhierarchical clustering methods consists of Fuzzy C-means (FCM), Intuitionistic Fuzzy C-means (IFCM), K-means and SOM artificial neural networks in order to automate segmentation of the VH-IVUS images

    Combinatorial optimisation for arterial image segmentation.

    Get PDF
    Cardiovascular disease is one of the leading causes of the mortality in the western world. Many imaging modalities have been used to diagnose cardiovascular diseases. However, each has different forms of noise and artifacts that make the medical image analysis field important and challenging. This thesis is concerned with developing fully automatic segmentation methods for cross-sectional coronary arterial imaging in particular, intra-vascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography, by incorporating prior and tracking information without any user intervention, to effectively overcome various image artifacts and occlusions. Combinatorial optimisation methods are proposed to solve the segmentation problem in polynomial time. A node-weighted directed graph is constructed so that the vessel border delineation is considered as computing a minimum closed set. A set of complementary edge and texture features is extracted. Single and double interface segmentation methods are introduced. Novel optimisation of the boundary energy function is proposed based on a supervised classification method. Shape prior model is incorporated into the segmentation framework based on global and local information through the energy function design and graph construction. A combination of cross-sectional segmentation and longitudinal tracking is proposed using the Kalman filter and the hidden Markov model. The border is parameterised using the radial basis functions. The Kalman filter is used to adapt the inter-frame constraints between every two consecutive frames to obtain coherent temporal segmentation. An HMM-based border tracking method is also proposed in which the emission probability is derived from both the classification-based cost function and the shape prior model. The optimal sequence of the hidden states is computed using the Viterbi algorithm. Both qualitative and quantitative results on thousands of images show superior performance of the proposed methods compared to a number of state-of-the-art segmentation methods

    Intermodal registration of CTA and IVUS-VH, and its application on CTA-based plaque composition analysis

    No full text
    corecore