Title :
Predicting Tumor Location by Modeling the Deformation of the Breast
Author :
Pathmanathan, Pras ; Gavaghan, David J. ; Whiteley, Jonathan P. ; Chapman, S. Jonathan ; Brady, J. Michael
Author_Institution :
Comput. Lab., Oxford Univ., Oxford
Abstract :
Breast cancer is one of the biggest killers in the western world, and early diagnosis is essential for improved prognosis. The shape of the breast varies hugely between the scenarios of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging (patient lies prone, breast hanging down under gravity), X-ray mammography (breast strongly compressed) and ultrasound or biopsy/surgery (patient lies supine), rendering image fusion an extremely difficult task. This paper is concerned with the use of the finite-element method and nonlinear elasticity to build a 3-D, patient-specific, anatomically accurate model of the breast. The model is constructed from MR images and can be deformed to simulate breast shape and predict tumor location during mammography or biopsy/surgery. Two extensions of the standard elasticity problem need to be solved: an inverse elasticity problem (arising from the fact that only a deformed, stressed, state is known initially), and the contact problem of modeling compression. The model is used for craniocaudal mediolateral oblique mammographic image matching, and a number of numerical experiments are performed.
Keywords :
biological organs; biomechanics; biomedical MRI; biomedical ultrasonics; cancer; deformation; diagnostic radiography; elasticity; finite element analysis; image matching; mammography; medical image processing; physiological models; surgery; tumours; X-ray mammography; biopsy; breast cancer; breast deformation; breast model; breast shape; compression modeling; craniocaudal mediolateral oblique mammography; finite-element method; image matching; inverse elasticity problem; magnetic resonance imaging; nonlinear elasticity; standard elasticity problem; surgery; tumor location; ultrasound imaging; Breast biopsy; Breast neoplasms; Deformable models; Elasticity; Image coding; Mammography; Predictive models; Shape; Surgery; Ultrasonic imaging; Breast; deformation; imaging; mechanics; Biopsy; Breast; Breast Neoplasms; Elasticity; Female; Finite Element Analysis; Humans; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Mammography; Models, Biological; Nonlinear Dynamics; Pressure; Subtraction Technique; Weight-Bearing;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2008.925714