2,191 research outputs found

    Quantitative magnetic resonance image analysis via the EM algorithm with stochastic variation

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    Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging (qMRI) provides researchers insight into pathological and physiological alterations of living tissue, with the help of which researchers hope to predict (local) therapeutic efficacy early and determine optimal treatment schedule. However, the analysis of qMRI has been limited to ad-hoc heuristic methods. Our research provides a powerful statistical framework for image analysis and sheds light on future localized adaptive treatment regimes tailored to the individual's response. We assume in an imperfect world we only observe a blurred and noisy version of the underlying pathological/physiological changes via qMRI, due to measurement errors or unpredictable influences. We use a hidden Markov random field to model the spatial dependence in the data and develop a maximum likelihood approach via the Expectation--Maximization algorithm with stochastic variation. An important improvement over previous work is the assessment of variability in parameter estimation, which is the valid basis for statistical inference. More importantly, we focus on the expected changes rather than image segmentation. Our research has shown that the approach is powerful in both simulation studies and on a real dataset, while quite robust in the presence of some model assumption violations.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/07-AOAS157 the Annals of Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    Fast and Robust Automatic Segmentation Methods for MR Images of Injured and Cancerous Tissues

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    Magnetic Resonance Imaging: MRI) is a key medical imaging technology. Through in vivo soft tissue imaging, MRI allows clinicians and researchers to make diagnoses and evaluations that were previously possible only through biopsy or autopsy. However, analysis of MR images by domain experts can be time-consuming, complex, and subject to bias. The development of automatic segmentation techniques that make use of robust statistical methods allows for fast and unbiased analysis of MR images. In this dissertation, I propose segmentation methods that fall into two classes---(a) segmentation via optimization of a parametric boundary, and: b) segmentation via multistep, spatially constrained intensity classification. These two approaches are applicable in different segmentation scenarios. Parametric boundary segmentation is useful and necessary for segmentation of noisy images where the tissue of interest has predictable shape but poor boundary delineation, as in the case of lung with heavy or diffuse tumor. Spatially constrained intensity classification is appropriate for segmentation of noisy images with moderate contrast between tissue regions, where the areas of interest have unpredictable shapes, as is the case in spinal injury and brain tumor. The proposed automated segmentation techniques address the need for MR image analysis in three specific applications:: 1) preclinical rodent studies of primary and metastatic lung cancer: approach: a)),: 2) preclinical rodent studies of spinal cord lesion: approach: b)), and: 3) postclinical analysis of human brain cancer: approach: b)). In preclinical rodent studies of primary and metastatic lung cancer, respiratory-gated MRI is used to quantitatively measure lung-tumor burden and monitor the time-course progression of individual tumors. I validate a method for measuring tumor burden based upon average lung-image intensity. The method requires accurate lung segmentation; toward this end, I propose an automated lung segmentation method that works for varying tumor burden levels. The method includes development of a novel, two-dimensional parametric model of the mouse lungs and a multifaceted cost function to optimally fit the model parameters to each image. Results demonstrate a strong correlation: 0.93), comparable with that of fully manual expert segmentation, between the automated method\u27s tumor-burden metric and the tumor burden measured by lung weight. In preclinical rodent studies of spinal cord lesion, MRI is used to quantify tissues in control and injured mouse spinal cords. For this application, I propose a novel, multistep, multidimensional approach, utilizing the Classification Expectation Maximization: CEM) algorithm, for automatic segmentation of spinal cord tissues. In contrast to previous methods, my proposed method incorporates prior knowledge of cord geometry and the distinct information contained in the different MR images gathered. Unlike previous approaches, the algorithm is shown to remain accurate for whole spinal cord, white matter, and hemorrhage segmentation, even in the presence of significant injury. The results of the method are shown to be on par with expert manual segmentation. In postclinical analysis of human brain cancer, access to large collections of MRI data enables scientifically rigorous study of cancers like glioblastoma multiforme, the most common form of malignant primary brain tumor. For this application, I propose an efficient and effective automated segmentation method, the Enhanced Classification Expectation Maximization: ECEM) algorithm. The ECEM algorithm is novel in that it introduces spatial information directly into the classical CEM algorithm, which is otherwise spatially unaware, with low additional computational complexity. I compare the ECEM\u27s performance on simulated data to the standard finite Gaussian mixture EM algorithm, which is not spatially aware, and to the hidden-Markov random field EM algorithm, a commonly-used spatially aware automated segmentation method for MR brain images. I also show sample results demonstrating the ECEM algorithm\u27s ability to segment MR images of glioblastoma

    A cross-center smoothness prior for variational Bayesian brain tissue segmentation

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    Suppose one is faced with the challenge of tissue segmentation in MR images, without annotators at their center to provide labeled training data. One option is to go to another medical center for a trained classifier. Sadly, tissue classifiers do not generalize well across centers due to voxel intensity shifts caused by center-specific acquisition protocols. However, certain aspects of segmentations, such as spatial smoothness, remain relatively consistent and can be learned separately. Here we present a smoothness prior that is fit to segmentations produced at another medical center. This informative prior is presented to an unsupervised Bayesian model. The model clusters the voxel intensities, such that it produces segmentations that are similarly smooth to those of the other medical center. In addition, the unsupervised Bayesian model is extended to a semi-supervised variant, which needs no visual interpretation of clusters into tissues.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Accepted to the International Conference on Information Processing in Medical Imaging (2019

    Automated Segmentation of Cerebral Aneurysm Using a Novel Statistical Multiresolution Approach

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    Cerebral Aneurysm (CA) is a vascular disease that threatens the lives of many adults. It a ects almost 1:5 - 5% of the general population. Sub- Arachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH), resulted by a ruptured CA, has high rates of morbidity and mortality. Therefore, radiologists aim to detect it and diagnose it at an early stage, by analyzing the medical images, to prevent or reduce its damages. The analysis process is traditionally done manually. However, with the emerging of the technology, Computer-Aided Diagnosis (CAD) algorithms are adopted in the clinics to overcome the traditional process disadvantages, as the dependency of the radiologist's experience, the inter and intra observation variability, the increase in the probability of error which increases consequently with the growing number of medical images to be analyzed, and the artifacts added by the medical images' acquisition methods (i.e., MRA, CTA, PET, RA, etc.) which impedes the radiologist' s work. Due to the aforementioned reasons, many research works propose di erent segmentation approaches to automate the analysis process of detecting a CA using complementary segmentation techniques; but due to the challenging task of developing a robust reproducible reliable algorithm to detect CA regardless of its shape, size, and location from a variety of the acquisition methods, a diversity of proposed and developed approaches exist which still su er from some limitations. This thesis aims to contribute in this research area by adopting two promising techniques based on the multiresolution and statistical approaches in the Two-Dimensional (2D) domain. The rst technique is the Contourlet Transform (CT), which empowers the segmentation by extracting features not apparent in the normal image scale. While the second technique is the Hidden Markov Random Field model with Expectation Maximization (HMRF-EM), which segments the image based on the relationship of the neighboring pixels in the contourlet domain. The developed algorithm reveals promising results on the four tested Three- Dimensional Rotational Angiography (3D RA) datasets, where an objective and a subjective evaluation are carried out. For the objective evaluation, six performance metrics are adopted which are: accuracy, Dice Similarity Index (DSI), False Positive Ratio (FPR), False Negative Ratio (FNR), speci city, and sensitivity. As for the subjective evaluation, one expert and four observers with some medical background are involved to assess the segmentation visually. Both evaluations compare the segmented volumes against the ground truth data

    Enhancement Techniques and Methods for Brain MRI Imaging

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    In this paper, it is planned to review and compare the different methods of enhancing a DICOM of brain MRIused in preprocessing and segmentation techniques. Image segmentation is the process of partitioning an image into multiple segments, so as to change the representation of an image into something that is more meaningful and easier to analyze. Several general-purpose algorithms and techniques have been developed for image segmentation. This paper describes the different segmentation techniques used in the field of ultrasound, MR image and SAR Image Processing. In preprocessing and enhancement stage is used to eliminate the noise and high frequency components from DICOM image. In this paper, various Preprocessing and Enhancement Technique, Segmentation Algorithm and their compared

    3D medical volume segmentation using hybrid multiresolution statistical approaches

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    This article is available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund. Copyright © 2010 S AlZu’bi and A Amira.3D volume segmentation is the process of partitioning voxels into 3D regions (subvolumes) that represent meaningful physical entities which are more meaningful and easier to analyze and usable in future applications. Multiresolution Analysis (MRA) enables the preservation of an image according to certain levels of resolution or blurring. Because of multiresolution quality, wavelets have been deployed in image compression, denoising, and classification. This paper focuses on the implementation of efficient medical volume segmentation techniques. Multiresolution analysis including 3D wavelet and ridgelet has been used for feature extraction which can be modeled using Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) to segment the volume slices. A comparison study has been carried out to evaluate 2D and 3D techniques which reveals that 3D methodologies can accurately detect the Region Of Interest (ROI). Automatic segmentation has been achieved using HMMs where the ROI is detected accurately but suffers a long computation time for its calculations
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