5 research outputs found

    Fully automated delineation of the optic radiation for surgical planning using clinically feasible sequences

    Full text link
    [EN] Quadrantanopia caused by inadvertent severing of Meyer's Loop of the optic radiation is a well-recognised complication of temporal lobectomy for conditions such as epilepsy. Dissection studies indicate that the anterior extent of Meyer's Loop varies considerably between individuals. Quantifying this for individual patients is thus an important step to improve the safety profile of temporal lobectomies. Previous attempts to delineate Meyer's Loop using diffusion MRI tractography have had difficulty estimating its full anterior extent, required manual ROI placement, and/or relied on advanced diffusion sequences that cannot be acquired routinely in most clinics. Here we present CONSULT: a pipeline that can delineate the optic radiation from raw DICOM data in a completely automated way via a combination of robust pre-processing, segmentation, and alignment stages, plus simple improvements that bolster the efficiency and reliability of standard tractography. We tested CONSULT on 696 scans of predominantly healthy participants (539 unique brains), including both advanced acquisitions and simpler acquisitions that could be acquired in clinically acceptable timeframes. Delineations completed without error in 99.4% of the scans. The distance between Meyer's Loop and the temporal pole closely matched both averages and ranges reported in dissection studies for all tested sequences. Median scan-rescan error of this distance was 1¿mm. When tested on two participants with considerable pathology, delineations were successful and realistic. Through this, we demonstrate not only how to identify Meyer's Loop with clinically feasible sequences, but also that this can be achieved without fundamental changes to tractography algorithms or complex post-processing methods.Advance Queensland, Grant/Award Number: R-09964-01; Fundacion Merck Salud; Proyecto Societat Catalana Neurologia; Ministerio de Economia, Industria y Competitividad of Spain, Grant/Award Number: DPI2017-87743-R; Red Espanola de Esclerosis Multiple, Grant/Award Numbers: RD12/0032/0002, RD12/0060/01-02, RD16/0015/0002, RD16/0015/0003; Spanish Government; Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Grant/Award Numbers: FIS 2015 PI15/00061, FIS 2015 - PI15/00587, FIS 2018 - PI18/01030Reid, LB.; Martínez-Heras, E.; Manjón Herrera, JV.; Jeffree, RL.; Alexander, H.; Trinder, J.; Solana, E.... (2021). Fully automated delineation of the optic radiation for surgical planning using clinically feasible sequences. Human Brain Mapping. 42(18):5911-5926. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25658S59115926421

    Avoiding data loss: Synthetic MRIs generated from diffusion imaging can replace corrupted structural acquisitions for freesurfer-seeded tractography

    No full text
    International audienceMagnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) motion artefacts frequently complicate structural and diffusion MRI analyses. While diffusion imaging is easily ’scrubbed’ of motion affected volumes, the same is not true for T1w or T2w ’structural’ images. Structural images are critical to most diffusion-imaging pipelines thus their corruption can lead to disproportionate data loss. To enable diffusion-image processing when structural images are missing or have been corrupted, we propose a means by which synthetic structural images can be generated from diffusion MRI. This technique combines multi-tissue constrained spherical deconvolution, which is central to many existing diffusion analyses, with the Bloch equations that allow simulation of MRI intensities for given scanner parameters and magnetic resonance (MR) tissue properties. We applied this technique to 32 scans, including those acquired on different scanners, with different protocols and with pathology present. The resulting synthetic T1w and T2w images were visually convincing and exhibited similar tissue contrast to acquired structural images. These were also of sufficient quality to drive a Freesurfer-based tractographic analysis. In this analysis, probabilistic tractography connecting the thalamus to the primary sensorimotor cortex was delineated with Freesurfer, using either real or synthetic structural images. Tractography for real and synthetic conditions was largely identical in terms of both voxels encountered (Dice 0.88-0.95) and mean fractional anisotropy (intrasubject absolute difference 0.00-0.02). We provide executables for the proposed technique in the hope that these may aid the community in analysing datasets where structural image corruption is common, such as studies of children or cognitively impaired persons

    Detection of clustered anomalies in single-voxel morphometry as a rapid automated method for identifying intracranial aneurysms

    No full text
    Unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs) are prevalent neurovascular anomalies which, in rare circumstances, rupture to cause a catastrophic subarachnoid haemorrhage. Although surgical management can reduce rupture risk, the majority of UIAs exist undiscovered until rupture. Current clinical practice in the detection of UIAs relies heavily on manual radiological review of standard imaging modalities. Recent computer-aided UIA diagnoses can sensitively detect and measure UIAs within cranial angiograms but remain limited to low specificities whose output also requires considerable radiologist interpretation not amenable to broad screening efforts. To address these limitations, we have developed a novel automatic pipeline algorithm which inputs medical images and outputs detected UIAs by characterising single-voxel morphometry of segmented neurovasculature. Once neurovascular anatomy of a specified resolution is segmented, correlations between voxel-specific morphometries are estimated and spatially-clustered outliers are identified as UIA candidates. Our automated solution detects UIAs within magnetic resonance angiograms (MRA) at unmatched 86% specificity and 81% sensitivity using 3 min on a conventional laptop. Our approach does not rely on interpatient comparisons or training datasets which could be difficult to amass and process for rare incidentally discovered UIAs within large MRA files, and in doing so, is versatile to user-defined segmentation quality, to detection sensitivity, and across a range of imaging resolutions and modalities. We propose this method as a unique tool to aid UIA screening, characterisation of abnormal vasculature in at-risk patients, morphometry-based rupture risk prediction, and identification of other vascular abnormalities.</p

    Reproducibility of the computational fluid dynamic analysis of a cerebral aneurysm monitored over a decade

    No full text
    Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations are increasingly utilised to evaluate intracranial aneurysm (IA) haemodynamics to aid in the prediction of morphological changes and rupture risk. However, these models vary and differences in published results warrant the investigation of IA-CFD reproducibility. This study aims to explore sources of intra-team variability and determine its impact on the aneurysm morphology and CFD parameters. A team of four operators were given six sets of magnetic resonance angiography data spanning a decade from one patient with a middle cerebral aneurysm. All operators were given the same protocol and software for model reconstruction and numerical analysis. The morphology and haemodynamics of the operator models were then compared. The segmentation, smoothing factor, inlet and outflow branch lengths were found to cause intra-team variability. There was 80% reproducibility in the time-averaged wall shear stress distribution among operators with the major difference attributed to the level of smoothing. Based on these findings, it was concluded that the clinical applicability of CFD simulations may be feasible if a standardised segmentation protocol is developed. Moreover, when analysing the aneurysm shape change over a decade, it was noted that the co-existence of positive and negative values of the wall shear stress divergence (WSSD) contributed to the growth of a daughter sac.</p
    corecore