16:00 |
671. |
Ultra
Fast Registration of Multiple MR Volumes Using MOPED
Mark
E. Bastin1, Benjamin D. Panter2,
Robert J. Tweedie2, William J. Hossack3,
Alan F. Heavens2
1Medical Physics, University of
Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Midlothian, United Kingdom; 2Institute
for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United
Kingdom; 3Physics, University of Edinburgh,
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Registration is a critical
step in the calculation of imaging biomarkers derived from
functional, diffusion, perfusion and permeability MRI. These
datasets typically comprise many tens of volumes, and
contain up to 100 individual images, registration of which
leads to a significant computational overhead in the
processing pipeline. In this abstract we present initial
results from the application of a novel registration method
based on the MOPED algorithm, developed in the field of
astronomy, which has the potential to reduce significantly
the time taken to align high dimensional MRI data. |
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16:12 |
672. |
Multi-Modal Structural Networks: Mapping of Connectivity
Through Diffusion, Functional, and Structural Assessment of
Intervening Pathways
John A. Bogovic1,
Min Chen1, Aaron Carass1, Pierre-Louis
Bazin2, Dzung Pham2, Susan M. Resnick3,
Jerry L. Prince1,4, Bennett Allan Landman4,5
1Electrical
and Computer Engineering, Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD, United States; 2Radiology, Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States; 3Laboratory
of Personality and Cognition, National Institute on Aging,
Baltimore, MD, United States; 4Biomedical
Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United
States; 5Electrical Engineering, Vanderbilt
University, Nashville, TN, United States
Understanding anatomical
connectivity and multivariate relationships in neuroimaging
data may be essential to elucidate multiple small changes
across the brain that combine to manifest in observable
phenotypes. While there are powerful tools to assess
connectivity through graphs using diffusion weighted MRI (DW-MRI),
association of DW-MRI metrics with connectivity necessitates
ad hoc choices. Herein, we show how connectivity can be
interpreted by multimodal characterization of the tissues
through which estimated tracts pass (in addition to metrics
on the DW-MRI tracts). We define and compute multi-modal
structural networks, which are multivariate graphs
representing connectivity among structural regions. |
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16:24 |
673. |
MR-Based
Whole-Body PET Attenuation Correction in Hybrid PET/MRI: A
Computationally Inexpensive Algorithm for T1, T2, and Proton
Density Weighted Images
Harry
Robert Marshall1,2, Robert Z. Stodilka, 12,
Benoit Lewden2, Jean Theberge1,2, Eric
Sabondjian1,2, Alexandre G. Legros2,
Andrea J. Mitchell2, Lela Deans2, Jane
M. Sykes2, R. Terry Thompson1,2, Frank
S. Prato1,2
1Medical Biophysics, The
University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada; 2Imaging,
Lawson Health Research Institute, London, ON, Canada
Whole-body attenuation
correction of PET images remains a crucial unsolved problem
in hybrid PET/MRI. We present an algorithm capable of taking
any of T1, T2, or proton density weighted MRI images as
input and producing a PET attenuation map of comparable
quality to a gold standard CT-derived attenuation map. The
idea is that no “special” MRI sequences need to be acquired
solely for the purposes of attenuation correction. The
algorithm was tested on nine low resolution canine images
with significant motion artefacts to ensure robustness.
The algorithm ran to
completion in under one minute making it practical for
clinical use. |
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16:36 |
674. |
MRI
Measurement of Ischemic Brain Penumbra Using an Inelastic
Collision Model
Hassan Bagher-Ebadian1,2, Panayiotis D. Mitsias1,
Mohammad Hossein Asgari1, Michael Chopp1,2,
James Russel Ewing1,2
1Department of Neurology, Henry
Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI, United States; 2Department
of Physics, Oakland University, Rochester, MI, United States
Experimental and clinical
studies indicate that the likelihood for progression to
infarction in the penumbra of physiologically impaired but
potentially salvageable tissue surrounding the central core
of focal cerebral ischemia is an important factor in
evaluating treatment efficacy. Thus, a multi-parametric
analysis that increases the ability of investigators to
detect and characterize ischemic penumbra in the early
stages of stroke have a profound clinical significance. In
this study, a mechanical model of inelastic collision is
recruited and adapted to information theory for constructing
a model-based algorithm for multi-parametric analysis of MR
information in acute stroke to detect ischemic brain
penumbra. |
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16:48 |
675. |
A General
Framework for the Analysis of Vessel Encoded Arterial Spin
Labelling
Michael A. Chappell1,2, Tom W. Okell1,
Peter Jezzard1, Mark W. Woolrich1
1FMRIB Centre, University of
Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom; 2Institute of
Biomedical Engineering, University of Oxford, Oxford, United
Kingdom
Vessel Encoded ASL offers
non-invasive vascular territory images. By spatially
modulating the ASL label over a series of acquisitions blood
from individual arteries is uniquely encoded such that its
contribution can subsequently be extracted in the analysis.
We propose a framework for the analysis of VE-ASL that
combines the advantages of the two leading analysis
approaches and is able to estimate perfusion even in areas
supplied by multiple arteries in the face of limited data
quality and quantity. |
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17:00 |
676. |
In
Vivo Myelin Water Imaging Using 3D Multi-Gradient-Echo
Pulse Sequences
Claudia Lenz1,
Klaus Scheffler1, Markus Klarhöfer1
1Radiological
Physics, University of Basel Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
Quantitative imaging of the
myelin water fraction (MWF) is able to show demyelinating
processes and therefore provides insight into the pathology
of white matter diseases such as multiple sclerosis. So far,
mapping of the MWF most often was performed using
single-slice multi-echo spin-echo sequences. Lately, a
different approach, using multi-gradient-echo pulse
sequences, was introduced by one study measuring
formalin-fixed brains and has been adapted to in vivo
measurements by different groups since then. In this work,
we present a solution for 3D in vivo myelin water imaging
with whole brain coverage by applying multi-gradient-echo
pulse sequences and using a non-negative least squares
algorithm to analyze the T2* decay. |
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17:12 |
677. |
Inferring
Axon Properties with Double-PGSE MRI Using Analytical Water
Diffusion Model
Wenjin Zhou1,
David H. Laidlaw1
1Computer Science,
Brown University, Providence, RI, United States
We present an analytical
water diffusion model for inferring axon properties using
double-PGSE MRI accounting for finite gradient pulses. Our
estimation results demonstrate the feasibility of revealing
axon properties including axon caliber using this approach.
The model utilizes the signal intensity dependency on two
gradient-pair direction variation to compensate for high-q
requirement in single-PGSE experiments. Since many gradient
directions can be acquired in rather short time on the
current MRI scanner, this approach may suggest potential for
clinical axonal-property estimation. |
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17:24 |
678. |
A Rapid,
Robust, Anatomy and Atlas Guided Lesion Quantification
Framework from Diffusion Weighted MR Images
- not available
Sumit K. Nath1, Dattesh Dayanand Shanbhag1,
Rakesh Mullick1, Uday Patil1, Marie
Luby2, Katherine D. Ku2, Lawrence L.
Latour2, Steven Warach2, NINDS
Natural History of Stroke Investigators2
1Imaging
Technologies, GE Global Research, Bangalore, Karnataka,
India; 2NINDS, NIH, Bethesda, MD, United States
A novel anatomical and atlas
guided split-and-merge algorithm is presented for
quantifying potential lesions in diffusion weighted MR
images. Compared with a conventional non split-and-merge
method, our approach leads to highly improved results when
analyzed with ground truth. |
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17:36 |
679. |
Robust
Automatic Rodent Brain Extraction Using Pulse-Coupled Neural
Networks in 3D
Nigel Chou1,
Jolena Tan1, Asad Abu Bakar Md Ali1,
Kai-Hsiang Chuang1
1Laboratory of
Molecular Imaging, Singapore Bioimaging Consortium, Agency
for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), Singapore,
Singapore
We present an automatic
brain-extraction algorithm optimized for rodents, based on a
pulse-coupled neural network (PCNN) operating in 3D. PCNN
‘links’ pixels with similar intensity, then a morphological
operation is used to separate regions, of which the largest
is selected as the brain mask. Using Jaccard index and
True-positive Rate as a measures of similarity to a manual
gold-standard, this method showed improved performance
compared to an existing algorithm (Brain Surface Extraction)
and a PCNN algorithm operating in 2D mode (on slices).
Additional advantages include reduced user intervention and
accurate segmentation of the olfactory bulb and
paraflocculus of cerebellum. |
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17:48 |
680. |
Non-Invasive and Temporally Resolved Measurement of
Ischaemic Tissue Damage in Acute Stroke Using Quantitative
23Na Magnetic Resonance Microscopy at 7 T
Friedrich Wetterling1,
Lindsay Gallagher2, Mhairi I. Macrae3,
Sven Junge4, Andrew John Fagan5
1School of
Physics, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland; 2Glasgow
Experimental MRI Centre, Division of Clinical
Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Glasgow,
Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom; 3Glasgow
Experimental MRI Centre, Division of Clinical Neuroscience,
Faculty of Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow,
Scotland, United Kingdom; 4Bruker BioSpin GmbH,
Ettlingen, Germany; 5Centre for Advanced Medical
Imaging, St. James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
In the current study,
quantitative 23Na Magnetic Resonance Microscopy (qNa
MRM) was used to measure the time course of Tissue Sodium
Concentration (TSC) in order to investigate regional
variations in TSC behavior in the first 8 hours after stroke
in a rodent model. The timecourse of the TSC evolution was
reproducible (n=5) with similar regional delays evident in
the timepoint at which the TSC increased during the first
hours after MCAO in each rat. The delay time parameter
could be used as a measure of ischaemic core tissue growth,
non-invasively and temporally resolved, thereby offering an
alternative method to post-mortem histology. |
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