Literature DB >> 20479649

Intravascular functional maps of common neurovascular lesions derived from volumetric 4D CT data.

Joe J Barfett1, Jorn Fierstra, Peter W A Willems, David J Mikulis, Timo Krings.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Current computed tomography angiography (CTA) postprocessing tools do not support quantitative assessment of intravascular physiology. Dynamic volumetric CT, acquired at a sufficiently high temporal resolution, is ideal for such analysis. Following preliminary experiments in flow phantoms, we examine the segmentation of blood vessels from 4D CT angiography by curve fit and encoding of functional blood flow information into the resulting functional intravascular maps.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Flow phantoms were constructed consisting of a single pipe input and 4 simultaneous outputs of varying flow rates. Two outflow pipe diameters were tested. Bolus transit time (TT), time to peak (TTP), and time of arrival (TOA) were analyzed using contrast bolus profiles generated from 4D volumetric CT examinations on a 320 detector scanner in regions of interest placed 10 cm apart in all outflow pipes. Six subjects with various neurovascular lesions were next examined using a volumetric contrast-enhanced 4D CT angiography protocol. Segmentation was performed by quadratic curve fit after comparative analysis and optimization of the segmentation technique using quadratic curves, the gamma variate function, and a simplified formulation of the gamma variate function. After segmentation, quantitative analysis of spatially congruent intravascular voxels including TTP, rise, TT, and slope of the contrast upstroke was employed to encode physiologic information into the segmentations and produce intravascular functional maps. Comparison was made in each case to the patient's routine imaging.
RESULTS: Increasing volumetric flow rates correspond to reduction of bolus TT in flow phantoms. TT elongation was observed as the contrast bolus moved distally in all pipes, with greater elongation seen at slower flow rates and larger pipe diameters. A greater difference was observed between TTP proximally and distally in pipes compared with TOA, an effect most prominent at slower flow rates and larger pipe lumens, and thus TTP was chosen for functional encoding into segmentations of the clinical series. In vivo, the quadratic function demonstrated the lowest coefficient of variation when fit to intravascular time density series and outperformed 2 formulations of the gamma variate function. After segmentation with quadratic curves, Gaussian distributions were chosen over gamma variate functions to characterize contrast bolus profiles while neglecting recirculation and to calculate functional parameters for spatial encoding. Intravascular functional maps free of bone artifacts were created in every case that demonstrated all appropriate vessels and showed agreement with conventional imaging modalities in terms of vessel delineation and the diagnosis of vascular pathology. The most useful and interesting functional maps are discussed in each case.
CONCLUSIONS: The above approach to quantitative CT angiography provides a method of evaluating dynamic CTA data by means of intravascular functional maps. The techniques are broadly applicable in the clinical assessment of a variety of vascular diseases.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20479649     DOI: 10.1097/RLI.0b013e3181e1939d

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest Radiol        ISSN: 0020-9996            Impact factor:   6.016


  4 in total

1.  Color-Mapping of 4D-CTA for the Detection of Cranial Arteriovenous Shunts.

Authors:  M Meijs; S A H Pegge; K Murayama; H D Boogaarts; M Prokop; P W A Willems; R Manniesing; F J A Meijer
Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol       Date:  2019-08-08       Impact factor: 3.825

2.  Intra-vascular blood velocity and volumetric flow rate calculated from dynamic 4D CT angiography using a time of flight technique.

Authors:  Joseph John Barfett; Nivethan Velauthapillai; Jorn Fierstra; Adrian Crawley; Catherine Coolens; Andrew Crean; Jeff Jaskolka; Paul Dufort; Timo Krings; David Mikulis
Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2014-07-08       Impact factor: 2.357

3.  Noise reduction and image quality improvement of low dose and ultra low dose brain perfusion CT by HYPR-LR processing.

Authors:  Radko Krissak; Charles A Mistretta; Thomas Henzler; Anastasios Chatzikonstantinou; Johann Scharf; Stefan O Schoenberg; Christian Fink
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-02-11       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Computational methods for visualizing and measuring verapamil efficacy for cerebral vasospasm.

Authors:  Andrew Abumoussa; Alex Flores; James Ho; Marc Niethammer; Deanna Sasaki-Adams; Yueh Z Lee
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-11-02       Impact factor: 4.379

  4 in total

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