Literature DB >> 20419041

Estimation of Cardiac Respiratory-Motion by Semi-Automatic Segmentation and Registration of Non-Contrast-Enhanced 4D-CT Cardiac Datasets.

Joyoni Dey1, Tinsu Pan, David J Choi, Dennis Robotis, Mark S Smyczynski, P Hendrik Pretorius, Michael A King.   

Abstract

The goal of this work is to investigate, for a large set of patients, the motion of the heart with respiration during free-breathing supine medical imaging. For this purpose we analyzed the motion of the heart in 32 non-contrast enhanced respiratory-gated 4D-CT datasets acquired during quiet unconstrained breathing. The respiratory-gated CT images covered the cardiac region and were acquired at each of 10 stages of the respiratory cycle, with the first stage being end-inspiration. We devised a 3-D semi-automated segmentation algorithm that segments the heart in the 4D-CT datasets acquired without contrast enhancement for use in estimating respiratory motion of the heart. Our semi-automated segmentation results were compared against interactive hand segmentations of the coronal slices by a cardiologist and a radiologist. The pairwise difference in segmentation among the algorithm and the physicians was on the average 11% and 10% of the total average segmented volume across the patient, with a couple of patients as outliers above the 95% agreement limit. The mean difference among the two physicians was 8% with an outlier above the 95% agreement limit. The 3-D segmentation was an order of magnitude faster than the Physicians' manual segmentation and represents significant reduction of Physicians' time. The segmented first stages of respiration were used in 12 degree-of-freedom (DOF) affine registration to estimate the motion at each subsequent stage of respiration. The registration results from the 32 patients indicate that the translation in the superior-inferior direction was the largest component motion, with a maximum of 10.7 mm, mean of 6.4 mm, and standard deviation of 2.2 mm. Translation in the anterior-posterior direction was the next largest component of motion, with a maximum of 4.0 mm, mean of 1.7 mm, and standard deviation of 1.0 mm. Rotation about the right-left axis was on average the largest component of rotation observed, with a maximum of 4.6 degrees, mean of 1.6 degrees, and standard deviation of 2.1 degrees. The other rotation and shear parameters were all close to zero on average indicting the motion could be reasonably well approximated by rigid-body motion. However, the product of the three scale factors averaged about 0.97 indicating the possibility of a small decrease in heart volume with expiration. The motion results were similar whether we used the Physician's segmentation or the 3-D algorithm.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 20419041      PMCID: PMC2858412          DOI: 10.1109/TNS.2009.2031642

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Nucl Sci        ISSN: 0018-9499            Impact factor:   1.679


  18 in total

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4.  A study of the motion and deformation of the heart due to respiration.

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5.  Model evaluation and calibration for prospective respiratory motion correction in coronary MR angiography based on 3-D image registration.

Authors:  Dirk Manke; Peter Rösch; Kay Nehrke; Peter Börnert; Olaf Dössel
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6.  Respiratory motion of the heart from free breathing coronary angiograms.

Authors:  Guy Shechter; Cengizhan Ozturk; Jon R Resar; Elliot R McVeigh
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 10.048

7.  4D-CT imaging of a volume influenced by respiratory motion on multi-slice CT.

Authors:  Tinsu Pan; Ting-Yim Lee; Eike Rietzel; George T Y Chen
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10.  Respiratory gating of cardiac PET data in list-mode acquisition.

Authors:  Lefteris Livieratos; Kim Rajappan; Lars Stegger; Klaus Schafers; Dale L Bailey; Paolo G Camici
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2006-01-17       Impact factor: 9.236

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2.  Modeling and incorporating cardiac-induced lung tissue motion in a breathing motion model.

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3.  Estimation and correction of cardiac respiratory motion in SPECT in the presence of limited-angle effects due to irregular respiration.

Authors:  Joyoni Dey; William P Segars; P Hendrik Pretorius; Ronn P Walvick; Philippe P Bruyant; Seth Dahlberg; Michael A King
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 4.071

4.  Theoretical and Numerical Study of MLEM and OSEM Reconstruction Algorithms for Motion Correction in Emission Tomography.

Authors:  Joyoni Dey; Michael A King
Journal:  IEEE Trans Nucl Sci       Date:  2009-10-01       Impact factor: 1.679

5.  MRI Investigation of the Linkage Between Respiratory Motion of the Heart and Markers on Patient's Abdomen and Chest: Implications for Respiratory Amplitude Binning List-Mode PET and SPECT Studies.

Authors:  Paul Dasari; Karen Johnson; Joyoni Dey; Clifford Lindsay; Mohammed S Shazeeb; Joyeeta Mitra Mukherjee; Shaokuan Zheng; Michael A King
Journal:  IEEE Trans Nucl Sci       Date:  2014-02-06       Impact factor: 1.679

6.  Investigation of the physical effects of respiratory motion compensation in a large population of patients undergoing Tc-99m cardiac perfusion SPECT/CT stress imaging.

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Review 7.  An Overview on Image Registration Techniques for Cardiac Diagnosis and Treatment.

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  7 in total

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