Title :
Graph-cuts based reconstructing patient specific right ventricle: First human study
Author :
Liang Zhong ; Min Wan ; Yi Su ; Soo Kng Teo ; Chi Wan Lim ; Xiaodan Zhao ; Jun-Mei Zhang ; Bo Yang Su ; Ju Le Tan ; Ru San Tan
Author_Institution :
Nat. Heart Centre Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
Abstract :
Right ventricular (RV) function is increasingly recognized to play an important role in the clinical status and long-term outcome in patients with congenital heart disease as well as ischemic cardiomyopathy with left ventricular dysfunction. However, quantification of RV characteristics and function are still challenging due to its complex morphology and its thin wall with coarse trabeculations. To assess RV functions quantitatively, establishing the patient-specific model from medical images is a prerequisite task. This study aims to develop a novel method for RV model reconstruction. Magnetic resonance images were acquired and preprocessed. Contours of right ventricle, right atrium and pulmonary artery were manually delineated at all slices and all time frames. The contour coordinates as well as the medical image specifications such as image pixel resolution and slick thickness were exported. The contours were transformed to the correct positions. Reorientation and matching were executed in between neighboring contours; extrapolation and interpolation were conducted upon all contours. After preprocessing, the more dense point set was reconstructed through a variational tool. A Delaunay-based tetrahedral mesh was generated on the region of interest. The weighted minimal surface model was used to describe RV surface. The graphcuts technique, i.e., max-flow/min-cut algorithm, was applied to minimize the energy defined by the model. The reconstructed surface was extracted from the mesh according to the mincut. Smoothing and remeshing were performed. The CPU time to reconstruct the model for one frame was approximately 2 minutes. In 10 consecutive subjects referred for cardiac MRI (80% female), right ventricular volumes were measured using our method against the commercial available CMRtools package. The results demonstrated that there was a significant correlation in end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes between our method and commercial software (r= 0.89 for end-di- stolic volume and r=0.79 for end-systolic volume, both P<;0.0001). The time to obtain right ventricular volumes was shorter using our method than commercial one. In conclusion, a new method for right ventricle reconstruction has been developed. We envisage that this automatic modeling tool could be used by radiographer and cardiologists to assess the RV function in diverse heart diseases.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; blood vessels; cardiovascular system; diseases; extrapolation; image matching; image reconstruction; image resolution; interpolation; medical image processing; mesh generation; physiological models; volume measurement; Delaunay-based tetrahedral mesh; congenital heart disease; end-diastolic volume measurement; end-systolic volume measurement; extrapolation; graph-cut technique; interpolation; ischemic cardiomyopathy; left ventricular dysfunction; magnetic resonance image acquisition; magnetic resonance image matching; magnetic resonance image processing; magnetic resonance image resolution; patient specific right ventricle reconstruction; pulmonary artery contours; right atrium contours; weighted minimal surface model; Arteries; Biomedical imaging; Heart; Image reconstruction; Shape; Smoothing methods; Surface reconstruction;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6945182