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Author |
Debora Gil; Jaume Garcia; Manuel Vazquez; Ruth Aris; Guillaume Houzeaux |
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Title |
Patient-Sensitive Anatomic and Functional 3D Model of the Left Ventricle Function |
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Conference Article |
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2008 |
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8th World Congress on Computational Mechanichs (WCCM8)/5th European Congress on Computational Methods in Applied Sciences and Engineering (ECCOMAS 2008) |
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Left Ventricle; Electromechanical Models; Image Processing; Magnetic Resonance. |
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Early diagnosis and accurate treatment of Left Ventricle (LV) dysfunction significantly increases the patient survival. Impairment of LV contractility due to cardiovascular diseases is reflected in its motion patterns. Recent advances in medical imaging, such as Magnetic Resonance (MR), have encouraged research on 3D simulation and modelling of the LV dynamics. Most of the existing 3D models consider just the gross anatomy of the LV and restore a truncated ellipse which deforms along the cardiac cycle. The contraction mechanics of any muscle strongly depends on the spatial orientation of its muscular fibers since the motion that the muscle undergoes mainly takes place along the fibers. It follows that such simplified models do not allow evaluation of the heart electro-mechanical function and coupling, which has recently risen as the key point for understanding the LV functionality . In order to thoroughly understand the LV mechanics it is necessary to consider the complete anatomy of the LV given by the orientation of the myocardial fibres in 3D space as described by Torrent Guasp. We propose developing a 3D patient-sensitive model of the LV integrating, for the first time, the ven- tricular band anatomy (fibers orientation), the LV gross anatomy and its functionality. Such model will represent the LV function as a natural consequence of its own ventricular band anatomy. This might be decisive in restoring a proper LV contraction in patients undergoing pace marker treatment. The LV function is defined as soon as the propagation of the contractile electromechanical pulse has been modelled. In our experiments we have used the wave equation for the propagation of the electric pulse. The electromechanical wave moves on the myocardial surface and should have a conductivity tensor oriented along the muscular fibers. Thus, whatever mathematical model for electric pulse propa- gation [4] we consider, the complete anatomy of the LV should be extracted. The LV gross anatomy is obtained by processing multi slice MR images recorded for each patient. Information about the myocardial fibers distribution can only be extracted by Diffusion Tensor Imag- ing (DTI), which can not provide in vivo information for each patient. As a first approach, we have computed an average model of fibers from several DTI studies of canine hearts. This rough anatomy is the input for our electro-mechanical propagation model simulating LV dynamics. The average fiber orientation is updated until the simulated LV motion agrees with the experimental evidence provided by the LV motion observed in tagged MR (TMR) sequences. Experimental LV motion is recovered by applying image processing, differential geometry and interpolation techniques to 2D TMR slices [5]. The pipeline in figure 1 outlines the interaction between simulations and experimental data leading to our patient-tailored model. |
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Venezia (Italia) |
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B-31470-08 |
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IAM @ iam @ GGV2008c |
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1521 |
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Author |
Debora Gil; Oriol Rodriguez; J. Mauri; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
Statistical descriptors of the Myocardial perfusion in angiographic images |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2006 |
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Proc. Computers in Cardiology |
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677-680 |
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Anisotropic processing; intravascular ultrasound (IVUS); vessel border segmentation; vessel structure classification. |
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Restoration of coronary flow after primary percutaneous coronary intervention in acute myocardial infarction does not always correlate with adequate myocardial perfusion. Recently, coronary angiography has been used to assess microcirculation integrity (Myocardial BlushAnalysis, MBA). Although MBA correlates with patient prognosis there are few image processing methods addressing objective perfusion quantification. The goal of this work is to develop statistical descriptors of the myocardial dyeing pattern allowing objective assessment of myocardial perfusion. Experiments on healthy right coronary arteries show that our approach allows reliable measurements without any specific image acquisition protocol. |
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IAM @ iam @ GRR2006 |
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1528 |
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Author |
Debora Gil; Petia Radeva; J. Mauri |
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Title |
Ivus Segmentation Via a Regularized Curvature Flow |
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2002 |
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X Congreso Anual de la Sociedad Española de Ingeniería Biomédica CASEIB 2002 |
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133-136 |
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Cardiac diseases are diagnosed and treated through a study of the morphology and dynamics of cardiac arteries. In- travascular Ultrasound (IVUS) imaging is of high interest to physicians since it provides both information. At the current state-of-the-art in image segmentation, a robust detection of the arterial lumen in IVUS demands manual intervention or ECG-gating. Manual intervention is a tedious and time consuming task that requires experienced observers, meanwhile ECG-gating is an acquisition technique not available in all clinical centers. We introduce a parametric algorithm that detects the arterial luminal border in in vivo sequences. The method consist in smoothing the sequences’ level surfaces under a regularized mean curvature flow that admits non-trivial steady states. The flow is based on a measure of the surface local smoothness that takes into account regularity of the surface curvature. |
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Saragossa, Espanya |
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IAM @ iam @ GRM2002 |
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1536 |
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Author |
Debora Gil; Petia Radeva; Jordi Saludes; J. Mauri |
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Title |
Automatic Segmentation of Artery Wall in Coronary IVUS Images: A Probabilistic Approach |
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2000 |
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International Conference on Pattern Recognition |
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4 |
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352-355 |
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Intravascular ultrasound images represent a unique tool to analyze the morphology of arteries and vessels (plaques, restenosis, etc). The poor quality of these images makes unsupervised segmentation based on traditional segmentation algorithms (such as edge or ridge/valley detection) fail to achieve the expected results. In this paper we present a probabilistic flexible template to separate different regions in the image. In particular, we use elliptic templates to model and detect the shape of the vessel inner wall in IVUS images. We present the results of successful segmentation obtained from patients undergoing stent treatment. A physician team has validated these results. |
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IAM @ iam @ GRS2000a |
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1537 |
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Author |
Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Debora Gil; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
On the usefulness of supervised learning for vessel border detection in IntraVascular Imaging |
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Conference Article |
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2005 |
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Proceeding of the 2005 conference on Artificial Intelligence Research and Development |
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67-74 |
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Keywords |
classification; vessel border modelling; IVUS |
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IntraVascular UltraSound (IVUS) imaging is a useful tool in diagnosis of cardiac diseases since sequences completely show the morphology of coronary vessels. Vessel borders detection, especially the external adventitia layer, plays a central role in morphological measures and, thus, their segmentation feeds development of medical imaging techniques. Deterministic approaches fail to yield optimal results due to the large amount of IVUS artifacts and vessel borders descriptors. We propose using classification techniques to learn the set of descriptors and parameters that best detect vessel borders. Statistical hypothesis test on the error between automated detections and manually traced borders by 4 experts show that our detections keep within inter-observer variability. |
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IOS Press |
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Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
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IAM @ iam @ HGR2005c |
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1549 |
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Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Debora Gil; Albert Teis |
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Title |
How Do Conservation Laws Define a Motion Suppression Score in In-Vivo Ivus Sequences? |
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2007 |
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Proc. IEEE Ultrasonics Symp |
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2231-2234 |
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validation standards; IVUS motion compensation; conservation laws. |
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Evaluation of arterial tissue biomechanics for diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases is an active research field in the biomedical imaging processing area. IntraVascular UltraSound (IVUS) is a unique tool for such assessment since it reflects tissue morphology and deformation. A proper quantification and visualization of both properties is hindered by vessel structures misalignments introduced by cardiac dynamics. This has encouraged development of IVUS motion compensation techniques. However, there is a lack of an objective evaluation of motion reduction ensuring a reliable clinical application This work reports a novel score, the Conservation of Density Rate (CDR), for validation of motion compensation in in-vivo pullbacks. Synthetic experiments validate the proposed score as measure of motion parameters accuracy; while results in in vivo pullbacks show its reliability in clinical cases. |
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IAM @ iam @ HTG2007 |
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1550 |
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Author |
Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Petia Radeva; Antonio Tovar; Debora Gil |
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Title |
Vessel structures alignment by spectral analysis of ivus sequences |
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2006 |
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Proc. of CVII, MICCAI Workshop |
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39-36 |
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Three-dimensional intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) allows to visualize and obtain volumetric measurements of coronary lesions through an exploration of the cross sections and longitudinal views of arteries. However, the visualization and subsequent morpho-geometric measurements in IVUS longitudinal cuts are subject to distortion caused by periodic image/vessel motion around the IVUS catheter. Usually, to overcome the image motion artifact ECG-gating and image-gated approaches are proposed, leading to slowing the pullback acquisition or disregarding part of IVUS data. In this paper, we argue that the image motion is due to 3-D vessel geometry as well as cardiac dynamics, and propose a dynamic model based on the tracking of an elliptical vessel approximation to recover the rigid transformation and align IVUS images without loosing any IVUS data. We report an extensive validation with synthetic simulated data and in vivo IVUS sequences of 30 patients achieving an average reduction of the image artifact of 97% in synthetic data and 79% in real-data. Our study shows that IVUS alignment improves longitudinal analysis of the IVUS data and is a necessary step towards accurate reconstruction and volumetric measurements of 3-D IVUS. |
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Copenhaguen (Denmark), |
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1st International Wokshop on Computer Vision for Intravascular and Intracardiac Imaging (CVII’06) |
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IAM; MILAB |
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IAM @ iam @ HRT2006 |
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1552 |
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Author |
Aura Hernandez-Sabate; David Rotger; Debora Gil |
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Title |
Image-based ECG sampling of IVUS sequences |
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2008 |
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Proc. IEEE Ultrasonics Symp. IUS 2008 |
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1330-1333 |
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Longitudinal Motion; Image-based ECG-gating; Fourier analysis |
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Longitudinal motion artifacts in IntraVascular UltraSound (IVUS) sequences hinders a properly 3D reconstruction and vessel measurements. Most of current techniques base on the ECG signal to obtain a gated pullback without the longitudinal artifact by using a specific hardware or the ECG signal itself. The potential of IVUS images processing for phase retrieval still remains little explored. In this paper, we present a fast forward image-based algorithm to approach ECG sampling. Inspired on the fact that maximum and minimum lumen areas are related to end-systole and end-diastole, our cardiac phase retrieval is based on the analysis of tissue density of mass along the sequence. The comparison between automatic and manual phase retrieval (0.07 ± 0.07 mm. of error) encourages a deep validation contrasting with ECG signals. |
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Beijing (China) |
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IAM;MILAB |
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IAM @ iam @ HRG2008 |
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1553 |
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Author |
Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Debora Gil; J. Mauri; Petia Radeva |
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Reducing cardiac motion in IVUS sequences |
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2006 |
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Proceeding of Computers in Cardiology |
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33 |
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685-688 |
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Cardiac vessel displacement is a main artifact in IVUS sequences. It hinders visualization of the main structures in an appropriate orientation and alignment and affects extracting vessel measurements. In this paper, we present a novel approach for image sequence alignment based on spectral analysis, which removes rigid dynamics, preserving at the same time the vessel geometry. First, we suppress the translation by taking, for each frame, the center of mass of the image as origin of coordinates. In polar coordinates with such point as origin, the rotation appears as a horizontal displacement. The translation induces a phase shift in the Fourier coefficients of two consecutive polar images. We estimate the phase by adjusting a regression plane to the phases of the principal frequencies. Experiments show that the presented strategy suppress cardiac motion regardless of the acquisition device. 1. |
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IAM; MILAB |
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IAM @ iam @ HGM2006a |
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1554 |
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Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Debora Gil; Petia Radeva; E.N.Nofrerias |
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Title |
Anisotropic processing of image structures for adventitia detection in intravascular ultrasound images |
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2004 |
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Proc. Computers in Cardiology |
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31 |
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229-232 |
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The adventitia layer appears as a weak edge in IVUS images with a non-uniform grey level, which difficulties its detection. In order to enhance edges, we apply an anisotropic filter that homogenizes the grey level along the image significant structures (ridges, valleys and edges). A standard edge detector applied to the filtered image yields a set of candidate points prone to be unconnected. The final model is obtained by interpolating the former line segments along the tangent direction to the level curves of the filtered image with an anisotropic contour closing technique based on functional extension principles |
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Chicago (USA) |
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IAM @ iam @ HGR2004 |
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1555 |
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