6 research outputs found

    3D T2w fetal body MRI:automated organ volumetry, growth charts and population-averaged atlas

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    Structural fetal body MRI provides true 3D information required for volumetry of fetal organs. However, current clinical and research practice primarily relies on manual slice-wise segmentation of raw T2-weighted stacks, which is time consuming, subject to inter- and intra-observer bias and affected by motion-corruption. Furthermore, there are no existing standard guidelines defining a universal approach to parcellation of fetal organs. This work produces the first parcellation protocol of the fetal body organs for motion-corrected 3D fetal body MRI. It includes 10 organ ROIs relevant to fetal quantitative volumetry studies. We also introduce the first population-averaged T2w MRI atlas of the fetal body. The protocol was used as a basis for training of a neural network for automated organ segmentation. It showed robust performance for different gestational ages. This solution minimises the need for manual editing and significantly reduces time. The general feasibility of the proposed pipeline was also assessed by analysis of organ growth charts created from automated parcellations of 91 normal control 3T MRI datasets that showed expected increase in volumetry during 22-38 weeks gestational age range. In addition, the results of comparison between 60 normal and 12 fetal growth restriction datasets revealed significant differences in organ volumes.</p

    3D black blood cardiovascular magnetic resonance atlases of congenital aortic arch anomalies and the normal fetal heart:application to automated multi-label segmentation

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    BACKGROUND: Image-domain motion correction of black-blood contrast T2-weighted fetal cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) using slice-to-volume registration (SVR) provides high-resolution three-dimensional (3D) images of the fetal heart providing excellent 3D visualisation of vascular anomalies [1]. However, 3D segmentation of these datasets, important for both clinical reporting and the application of advanced analysis techniques is currently a time-consuming process requiring manual input with potential for inter-user variability. METHODS: In this work, we present novel 3D fetal CMR population-averaged atlases of normal and abnormal fetal cardiovascular anatomy. The atlases are created using motion-corrected 3D reconstructed volumes of 86 third trimester fetuses (gestational age range 29-34 weeks) including: 28 healthy controls, 20 cases with postnatally confirmed neonatal coarctation of the aorta (CoA) and 38 vascular rings (21 right aortic arch (RAA), 17 double aortic arch (DAA)). We used only high image quality datasets with isolated anomalies and without any other deviations in the cardiovascular anatomy.In addition, we implemented and evaluated atlas-guided registration and deep learning (UNETR) methods for automated 3D multi-label segmentation of fetal cardiac vessels. We used images from CoA, RAA and DAA cohorts including: 42 cases for training (14 from each cohort), 3 for validation and 6 for testing. In addition, the potential limitations of the network were investigated on unseen datasets including 3 early gestational age (22 weeks) and 3 low SNR cases. RESULTS: We created four atlases representing the average anatomy of the normal fetal heart, postnatally confirmed neonatal CoA, RAA and DAA. Visual inspection was undertaken to verify expected anatomy per subgroup. The results of the multi-label cardiac vessel UNETR segmentation showed 100[Formula: see text] per-vessel detection rate for both normal and abnormal aortic arch anatomy. CONCLUSIONS: This work introduces the first set of 3D black-blood T2-weighted CMR atlases of normal and abnormal fetal cardiovascular anatomy including detailed segmentation of the major cardiovascular structures. Additionally, we demonstrated the general feasibility of using deep learning for multi-label vessel segmentation of 3D fetal CMR images. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12968-022-00902-z
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