752 research outputs found

    Highly automatic quantification of myocardial oedema in patients with acute myocardial infarction using bright blood T2-weighted CMR

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    <p>Background: T2-weighted cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is clinically-useful for imaging the ischemic area-at-risk and amount of salvageable myocardium in patients with acute myocardial infarction (MI). However, to date, quantification of oedema is user-defined and potentially subjective.</p> <p>Methods: We describe a highly automatic framework for quantifying myocardial oedema from bright blood T2-weighted CMR in patients with acute MI. Our approach retains user input (i.e. clinical judgment) to confirm the presence of oedema on an image which is then subjected to an automatic analysis. The new method was tested on 25 consecutive acute MI patients who had a CMR within 48 hours of hospital admission. Left ventricular wall boundaries were delineated automatically by variational level set methods followed by automatic detection of myocardial oedema by fitting a Rayleigh-Gaussian mixture statistical model. These data were compared with results from manual segmentation of the left ventricular wall and oedema, the current standard approach.</p> <p>Results: The mean perpendicular distances between automatically detected left ventricular boundaries and corresponding manual delineated boundaries were in the range of 1-2 mm. Dice similarity coefficients for agreement (0=no agreement, 1=perfect agreement) between manual delineation and automatic segmentation of the left ventricular wall boundaries and oedema regions were 0.86 and 0.74, respectively.</p&gt

    Methodology for Jointly Assessing Myocardial Infarct Extent and Regional Contraction in 3-D CMRI

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    Automated extraction of quantitative parameters from Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Images (CMRI) is crucial for the management of patients with myocardial infarct. This work proposes a post-processing procedure to jointly analyze Cine and Delayed-Enhanced (DE) acquisitions in order to provide an automatic quantification of myocardial contraction and enhancement parameters and a study of their relationship. For that purpose, the following processes are performed: 1) DE/Cine temporal synchronization and 3D scan alignment, 2) 3D DE/Cine rigid registration in a region about the heart, 3) segmentation of the myocardium on Cine MRI and superimposition of the epicardial and endocardial contours on the DE images, 4) quantification of the Myocardial Infarct Extent (MIE), 5) study of the regional contractile function using a new index, the Amplitude to Time Ratio (ATR). The whole procedure was applied to 10 patients with clinically proven myocardial infarction. The comparison between the MIE and the visually assessed regional function scores demonstrated that the MIE is highly related to the severity of the wall motion abnormality. In addition, it was shown that the newly developed regional myocardial contraction parameter (ATR) decreases significantly in delayed enhanced regions. This largely automated approach enables a combined study of regional MIE and left ventricular function

    Automated Segmentation of Left and Right Ventricles in MRI and Classification of the Myocarfium Abnormalities

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    A fundamental step in diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases, automated left and right ventricle (LV and RV) segmentation in cardiac magnetic resonance images (MRI) is still acknowledged to be a difficult problem. Although algorithms for LV segmentation do exist, they require either extensive training or intensive user inputs. RV segmentation in MRI has yet to be solved and is still acknowledged a completely unsolved problem because its shape is not symmetric and circular, its deformations are complex and varies extensively over the cardiac phases, and it includes papillary muscles. In this thesis, I investigate fast detection of the LV endo- and epi-cardium surfaces (3D) and contours (2D) in cardiac MRI via convex relaxation and distribution matching. A rapid 3D segmentation of the RV in cardiac MRI via distribution matching constraints on segment shape and appearance is also investigated. These algorithms only require a single subject for training and a very simple user input, which amounts to one click. The solution is sought following the optimization of functionals containing probability product kernel constraints on the distributions of intensity and geometric features. The formulations lead to challenging optimization problems, which are not directly amenable to convex-optimization techniques. For each functional, the problem is split into a sequence of sub-problems, each of which can be solved exactly and globally via a convex relaxation and the augmented Lagrangian method. Finally, an information-theoretic based artificial neural network (ANN) is proposed for normal/abnormal LV myocardium motion classification. Using the LV segmentation results, the LV cavity points is estimated via a Kalman filter and a recursive dynamic Bayesian filter. However, due to the similarities between the statistical information of normal and abnormal points, differentiating between distributions of abnormal and normal points is a challenging problem. The problem was investigated with a global measure based on the Shannon\u27s differential entropy (SDE) and further examined with two other information-theoretic criteria, one based on Renyi entropy and the other on Fisher information. Unlike the existing information-theoretic studies, the approach addresses explicitly the overlap between the distributions of normal and abnormal cases, thereby yielding a competitive performance. I further propose an algorithm based on a supervised 3-layer ANN to differentiate between the distributions farther. The ANN is trained and tested by five different information measures of radial distance and velocity for points on endocardial boundary

    Automated Method for the Volumetric Evaluation of Myocardial Scar from Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Images

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    In most western countries cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death, and for the survivors of ischemic attack an accurate quantification of the extent of the damage is required to correctly assess its impact and for risk stratification, and to select the best treatment for the patient. Moreover, a fast and reliable tool for the assessment of the cardiac function and the measurement of clinical indexes is highly desirable. The aim of this thesis is to provide computational approaches to better detect and assess the presence of myocardial fibrosis in the heart, particularly but not only in the left ventricle, by performing a fusion of the information from different magnetic resonance imaging sequences. We also developed and provided a semiautomatic tool useful for the fast evaluation and quantification of clinical indexes derived from heart chambers volumes. The thesis is composed by five chapters. The first chapter introduces the most common cardiac diseases such as ischemic cardiomyopathy and describes in detail the cellular and structural remodelling phenomena stemming from heart failure. The second chapter regards the detection of the left ventricle through the development of a semi-automated approach for both endocardial and epicardial surfaces, and myocardial mask extraction. In the third chapter the workflow for scar assessment is presented, in which the previously described approach is used to obtain the 3D left ventricle patient-specific geometry; a registration algorithm is then used to superimpose the fibrosis information derived from the late gadolinium enhancement magnetic resonance imaging to obtain a patientspecific 3D map of fibrosis extension and location on the left ventricle myocardium. Focus of the fourth chapter is on the left atrium, and fibrotic tissue detection for gaining insight on atrial fibrillation. In the fifth chapter some conclusive remarks are presented with possible future developments of the presented work

    Automatic segmentation of the left ventricle cavity and myocardium in MRI data

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    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

    Extraction of epi-cardium contours from unseen images using a shape database

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    Accurate segmentation of the myocardium in cardiac magnetic resonance images can be restricted by image noise and low discrimination between the epi-cardium boundary and other organs. Segmentation of the epi-cardium is important for the calculation of left ventricle mass. In this paper we propose a novel method of epi-cardium segmentation, which firstly segments the left ventricle cavity. The epi-cardium boundary is found using the edge information in the image, and where such information is lacking it enhances the shape with the best fitting scaled segment, taken from a database of expertly assisted hand segmented images. In the final stage the segments are connected using a natural closed spline. The method was evaluated using a leave-one-out strategy on 24 volumes and calculates the coefficient of determination as 0.93 and a root mean square of the point to curve error of 1.54 mm when compared to manually segmented images
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