Literature DB >> 22830758

Nonrigid registration-based coronary artery motion correction for cardiac computed tomography.

Roshni Bhagalia1, Jed D Pack, James V Miller, Maria Iatrou.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: X-ray computed tomography angiography (CTA) is the modality of choice to noninvasively monitor and diagnose heart disease with coronary artery health and stenosis detection being of particular interest. Reliable, clinically relevant coronary artery imaging mandates high spatiotemporal resolution. However, advances in intrinsic scanner spatial resolution (CT scanners are available which combine nearly 900 detector columns with focal spot oversampling) can be tempered by motion blurring, particularly in patients with unstable heartbeats. As a result, recently numerous methods have been devised to improve coronary CTA imaging. Solutions involving hardware, multisector algorithms, or β-blockers are limited by cost, oversimplifying assumptions about cardiac motion, and populations showing contraindications to drugs, respectively. This work introduces an inexpensive algorithmic solution that retrospectively improves the temporal resolution of coronary CTA without significantly affecting spatial resolution.
METHODS: Given the goal of ruling out coronary stenosis, the method focuses on "deblurring" the coronary arteries. The approach makes no assumptions about cardiac motion, can be used on exams acquired at high heart rates (even over 75 beats/min), and draws on a fast and accurate three-dimensional (3D) nonrigid bidirectional labeled point matching approach to estimate the trajectories of the coronary arteries during image acquisition. Motion compensation is achieved by employing a 3D warping of a series of partial reconstructions based on the estimated motion fields. Each of these partial reconstructions is created from data acquired over a short time interval. For brevity, the algorithm "Subphasic Warp and Add" (SWA) reconstruction.
RESULTS: The performance of the new motion estimation-compensation approach was evaluated by a systematic observer study conducted using nine human cardiac CTA exams acquired over a range of average heart rates between 68 and 86 beats/min. Algorithm performance was based-lined against exams reconstructed using standard filtered-backprojection (FBP). The study was performed by three experienced reviewers using the American Heart Association's 15-segment model. All vessel segments were evaluated to quantify their viability to allow a clinical diagnosis before and after motion estimation-compensation using SWA. To the best of the authors' knowledge this is the first such observer study to show that an image processing-based software approach can improve the clinical diagnostic value of CTA for coronary artery evaluation.
CONCLUSIONS: Results from the observer study show that the SWA method described here can dramatically reduce coronary artery motion and preserve real pathology, without affecting spatial resolution. In particular, the method successfully mitigated motion artifacts in 75% of all initially nondiagnostic coronary artery segments, and in over 45% of the cases this improvement was enough to make a previously nondiagnostic vessel segment clinically diagnostic.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22830758     DOI: 10.1118/1.4725712

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  3 in total

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Authors:  Bhavna Balaney; Mani Vembar; Michael Grass; Amita Singh; Keigo Kawaji; Luis Landeras; Jonathan Chung; Victor Mor-Avi; Amit R Patel
Journal:  Eur J Radiol       Date:  2019-03-02       Impact factor: 3.528

2.  Quest for the ultimate cardiac CT scanner.

Authors:  Paul FitzGerald; Peter Edic; Hewei Gao; Yannan Jin; Jiao Wang; Ge Wang; Bruno De Man
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2017-07-17       Impact factor: 4.071

3.  Coronary CT angiography (cCTA): automated registration of coronary arterial trees from multiple phases.

Authors:  Lubomir Hadjiiski; Chuan Zhou; Heang-Ping Chan; Aamer Chughtai; Prachi Agarwal; Jean Kuriakose; Ella Kazerooni; Jun Wei; Smita Patel
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2014-07-31       Impact factor: 3.609

  3 in total

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