Title :
Deformation analysis to detect and quantify active lesions in three-dimensional medical image sequences
Author :
Thirion, Jean-philippe ; Calmon, Guillaume
Author_Institution :
FOCUS Imaging, Valbonne, France
fDate :
5/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Evaluating precisely the temporal variations of lesion volumes is very important for at least three types of practical applications: pharmaceutical trials, decision making for drug treatment or surgery, and patient follow-up. Here, the authors present a volumetric analysis technique, combining precise rigid registration of three-dimensional (3-D) (volumetric) medical images, nonrigid deformation computation, and flow-field analysis. Their analysis technique has two outcomes: the detection of evolving lesions and the quantitative measurement of volume variations. The originality of the authors´ approach is that no precise segmentation of the lesion is needed but the approximative designation of a region of interest (ROI) which can be automated. They distinguish between tissue transformation (image intensity changes without deformation) and expansion or contraction effects reflecting a change of mass within the tissue. A real lesion is generally the combination of both effects. The method is tested with synthesized volumetric image sequences and applied, in a first attempt to quantify in vivo a mass effect, to the analysis of a real patient case with multiple sclerosis (MS).
Keywords :
image segmentation; image sequences; medical image processing; stereo image processing; volume measurement; evolving lesions; image intensity changes; mass effect; medical diagnostic imaging; motion field analysis; multiple sclerosis patient; precise rigid registration; stereology; synthesized volumetric image sequences; tissue transformation; volumetric analysis technique; Biomedical imaging; Decision making; Drugs; Image analysis; Image sequence analysis; Image sequences; Lesions; Medical treatment; Multiple sclerosis; Pharmaceuticals; Algorithms; Clinical Trials as Topic; Drug Evaluation; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Multiple Sclerosis; Reproducibility of Results; Stochastic Processes; Surgical Procedures, Operative; Time Factors;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on