• DocumentCode
    794527
  • Title

    Level-set-based artery-vein separation in blood pool agent CE-MR angiograms

  • Author

    Van Bemmel, Cornelis M. ; Spreeuwers, Luuk J. ; Viergever, Max A. ; Niessen, Wiro J.

  • Author_Institution
    Image Sci. Inst., Univ. Med. Center, Utrecht, Netherlands
  • Volume
    22
  • Issue
    10
  • fYear
    2003
  • Firstpage
    1224
  • Lastpage
    1234
  • Abstract
    Blood pool agents (BPAs) for contrast-enhanced (CE) magnetic-resonance angiography (MRA) allow prolonged imaging times for higher contrast and resolution. Imaging is performed during the steady state when the contrast agent is distributed through the complete vascular system. However, simultaneous venous and arterial enhancement in this steady state hampers interpretation. In order to improve visualization of the arteries and veins from steady-state BPA data, a semiautomated method for artery-vein separation is presented. In this method, the central arterial axis and central venous axis are used as initializations for two surfaces that simultaneously evolve in order to capture the arterial and venous parts of the vasculature using the level-set framework. Since arteries and veins can be in close proximity of each other, leakage from the evolving arterial (venous) surface into the venous (arterial) part of the vasculature is inevitable. In these situations, voxels are labeled arterial or venous based on the arrival time of the respective surface. The evolution is steered by external forces related to feature images derived from the image data and by internal forces related to the geometry of the level sets. In this paper, the robustness and accuracy of three external forces (based on image intensity, image gradient, and vessel-enhancement filtering) and combinations of them are investigated and tested on seven patient datasets. To this end, results with the level-set-based segmentation are compared to the reference-standard manually obtained segmentations. Best results are achieved by applying a combination of intensity- and gradient-based forces and a smoothness constraint based on the curvature of the surface. By applying this combination to the seven datasets, it is shown that, with minimal user interaction, artery-vein separation for improved arterial and venous visualization in BPA CE-MRA can be achieved.
  • Keywords
    biomedical MRI; blood vessels; image enhancement; image resolution; image segmentation; medical image processing; arrival time; arterial enhancement; arterial part; blood pool agent CE-MR angiograms; central arterial axis; central venous axis; complete vascular system; contrast agent; contrast-enhanced magnetic-resonance angiography; evolving arterial surface; evolving venous surface; external forces; feature images; gradient-based forces; higher contrast; image gradient; image intensity; initializations; intensity-based forces; level-set-based artery-vein separation; level-set-based segmentation; minimal user interaction; patient datasets; prolonged imaging times; reference-standard manually obtained segmentations; resolution; robustness; semiautomated method; simultaneous enhancement; smoothness constraint; steady state; surface curvature; vasculature; venous enhancement; venous part; vessel-enhancement filtering; visualization; voxels; Angiography; Arteries; Blood; Data visualization; High-resolution imaging; Image resolution; Image segmentation; Magnetic separation; Steady-state; Veins; Algorithms; Arteries; Contrast Media; Humans; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Magnetic Resonance Angiography; Pattern Recognition, Automated; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Subtraction Technique; Veins;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-0062
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMI.2003.817756
  • Filename
    1233921