46 research outputs found

    The end of the playtime for the incumbent operator? Note under Belgian NCA's decision Belgacom/Scarlet of 7th November 2008

    Full text link
    Le Conseil belge de la concurrence a décidé de subordonner l'autorisation de la concentration entre Belgacom et Scarlet à la mise en oeuvre de diverses mesures correctives structurelles et comportementales

    Brain MRI segmentation for focal cortical dysplasia lesion detection

    No full text

    Automatic 3D graph cuts for brain cortex segmentation in patients with focal cortical dysplasia

    No full text
    In patients with intractable epilepsy, focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is the most frequent malformation of cortical development. Identification of subtle FCD lesions using brain MRI scans is very often based on the cortical thickness measurement, where brain cortex segmentation is required as a preprocessing step. However, the accuracy of the selected segmentation method can highly affect the final FCD lesion detection. In this work, we propose an improved graph cuts algorithm integrating Markov random field-based energy function for more accurate brain cortex MRI segmentation. Our method uses three-label graph cuts and preforms automatic 3D MRI brain cortex segmentation integrating intensity and boundary information. The performance of the method is tested on both simulated MR brain images with different noise levels and real patients with FCD lesions. Experimental quantitative segmentation results showed that the proposed method is effective, robust to noise and achieves higher accuracy than other popular brain MRI segmentation methods. The qualitative validation, visually verified by a medical expert, showed that the FCD lesions were segmented well as a part of the cortex, indicating increased thickness and cortical deformation. The proposed technique can be successfully used in this, as well as in many other clinical applications

    Revascularisation of chronic total occlusions and recurrence rate of ventricular arrhythmias

    No full text
    Background: The impact of revascularisation of chronic total occlusions (CTO) on the incidence of ventricular arrhythmias (VA) remains to be elucidated.Methods: Based on prospectively gathered data, the recurrence rate of VAs following CTO treatment was retrospectively investigated. Patients presenting with VAs as clinical indication for CTO revascularisation were retrospectively selected out of three Belgian CTO registries (i.e. Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg, UZ Leuven and CHR de la Citadelle). Freedom of VAs was defined as absence of non-sustained or sustained tachycardias (VT), ventricular fibrillations (Vfib) and ventricular extrasystoles (VES; 2500 VES/24 hrs, non-sustained VT, sustained VT and Vfib, respectively. In those patients with a one-year follow-up available (n = 34), overall recurrence rate of VAs was 38% (within VA group: VES: 25%, non-sustained VT: 46%; sustained VT: 25% and Vfib: 60%).Conclusion: Based on this retrospective data analysis, CTO revascularisation, in patients presenting with VAs as the main clinical indication, seems to beneficially impact the incidence of VAs, which ultimately might result in improved patients' outcome.status: publishe
    corecore