Traditional Posters
: Pulse Sequences, Reconstruction & Analysis
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Click on
to view the
abstract pdf and click on
to view the pdf of the poster viewable in the poster hall.
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Body MRI: Applications & Evaluations
Tuesday May 10th
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 15:30 |
2623. |
Evaluation of
the Recipient Vessels after Orthotopic Liver
Transplantation by Non-Contrast Magnetic
Resonance Angiography: a SLEEK sequence
yigang pei1, and daoyu hu2
1Department of Radiology, Tongji
Hospital,Tongji Medical College,Huazhong
University of Science and Technology, wuhan,
Hubei, China, People's Republic of, 21Department
of Radiology, Tongji Hospital,Tongji Medical
College,Huazhong University of Science and
Technology
The recipient vessels after orthotopic liver
transplantation (OLT) are often evaluated by
CT and MRI, but the recipient vessels either
may be contaminated by other vessel or may
not be presented distinctly due to the
individual hemodynamics changes. In
addition, Gd or iodine contrast media are
applied on CT and MRI for displaying the
recipient vessel which may cause nephrogenic
systemic fibrosis (NSF) or contrast-Induced
Nephropathy. Therefore, a non-contrast
magnetic resonance angiography (NC-MRA) is
desirable to develop for presenting the
recipient vessels. In this study, a new NC-MRA
(Spatial LabEling with multiple invErsion
pulses, SLEEK) has been applied to delineate
the recipient vessel after OLT.
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2624. |
Robust Renal
MRA using Breath-hold, IR-prep, Dixon bSSFP at
3T
Pauline Wong Worters1, Manojkumar
Saranathan1, Alan Xu1,
and Shreyas Vasanawala1
1Stanford University, Stanford,
CA, United States
A sequence is developed to provide high
spatial resolution renal angiograms within
breath-holding times. Balanced SSFP has good
flow properties, and high T2/T1 contrast and
SNR efficiency. IR preparation provides
inflow sensitivity, while Dixon technique
allows for excellent fat suppression. An
efficient k-space trajectory enabled
acquisition in 20-30 seconds. We evaluated
IR-prep, Dixon bSSFP by comparing it to a
commercially available, respiratory-gated
technique Inhance IFIR (2-5 min) in 9
patients at 3T. No significant difference in
artery visualization or image quality was
found between Inhance IFIR and ECG-gated,
breath-hold IR-prep, Dixon bSSFP. We have
shown a robust sequence that provides
diagnostic-quality renal angiograms
comparable to a commercially available
sequence, with significantly shorter scan
times and without compromising spatial
coverage and resolution.
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Traditional Posters
: Pulse Sequences, Reconstruction & Analysis
|
Click on
to view the
abstract pdf and click on
to view the pdf of the poster viewable in the poster hall.
|
Analysis of Breast Images
Wednesday May 11th
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 15:30 |
2625. |
The effect of acquisition
parameter changes on the outcome of texture analysis using a
clinical breast MRI sequence on a foam phantom at 1.5T
Shelley Waugh1,2, Richard Lerski1,2,
L. Bidaut2, and Alastair Thompson2,3
1Medical Physics, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee,
United Kingdom, 2University
of Dundee, Dundee, United Kingdom, 3Department
of Surgery, Ninewells Hospital, United Kingdom
The aim of this study was to identify whether four
different grades of reticulated foam, which appeared
visually identical when imaged on a 1.5T MRI scanner
using a gradient echo sequence, could be distinguished
using texture analysis. The influence of changing the
sequence parameters on the outcome of texture analysis
was also assessed. Results showed that foams could be
reliably differentiated using the wavelet transform,
with no data misclassification. The co-occurrence matrix
also produced moderately good results. Sequence
parameter changes appeared to have little influence on
the classification accuracy for this particular protocol
and foam phantom.
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2626. |
Computerized
Classification of Benign and Malignant Breast Lesions on
DCE-MRI Utilizing Novel Shape Descriptors
Rachel Evonne Sparks1, and Anant Madabhushi1
1Biomedical Engineering, Rutgers University,
Piscataway, NJ, United States
The abstract presents a computerized decision support
tool which utilizes novel morphologic descriptors for
distinguishing benign from malignant breast lesions as
they appear on DCE-MRI. The computerized decision
support tools were evaluated on 41 suspicious breast
lesions and gave a classification accurate of 83.0 ± 4.5
%.
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2627. |
Two non-linear parametric
models of enhancement for breast DCE-MRI that can be fitted
using linear least squares
Andrew Mehnert1, Michael Wildermoth1,
Stuart Crozier1, Ewert Bengtsson2,
and Dominic Kennedy3
1School of ITEE, The University of
Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia, 2Centre
for Image Analysis, Uppsala University, Sweden, 3Queensland
X-Ray, Greenslopes Private Hospital, Greenslopes,
Australia
Two non-linear empirical parametric models are proffered
for use in quantitatively characterizing contrast
enhancement in dynamic contrast enhanced MRI of the
breast: linear-slope and Ricker. The advantage of these
models over existing pharmacokinetic and empirical
models is that they can be fitted using linear least
squares which means that fitting is quick, there is no
need to specify initial parameter estimates, and there
are no convergence issues. An empirical evaluation of
the goodness-of-fit of these two models relative to the
Hayton and the simplified gamma-variate model is also
presented.
|
2628. |
The influence of field
strength and different clinical breast MRI protocols on the
outcome of texture analysis using foam phantoms
Shelley Waugh1,2, Richard Lerski1,2,
L. Bidaut2, and Alastair Thompson2,3
1Medical Physics, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee,
Angus, United Kingdom, 2University
of Dundee, Dundee, Angus, United Kingdom, 3Department
of Surgery, Ninewells Hospital, United Kingdom
The aim of this study was to assess the impact of
different imaging protocols and field strengths on
classification accuracy of texture analysis in
differentiating four different grades of reticulated
foam when imaged using MRI gradient-echo sequences. A
high spatial resolution protocol with matched
acquisition parameters was used at 1.5T and 3.0T and a
high temporal resolution sequence (lower spatial
resolution) also used at 3.0T. Results showed that the
wavelet transform resulted in perfect differentiation of
the four foams across all protocols. The co-occurrence
matrix results were improved at 3.0T compared to 1.5T,
particularly for the high spatial resolution protocol.
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2629. |
Optimization of Breast
Tissue Segmentation: Comparison of Support Vector Machine
and Fuzzy C-mean Clustering Algorithms
Yi Wang1,2, Glen Morrell2, Allison
Payne2, and Dennis L. Parker1,2
1Bioengineering, University of Utah, Salt
Lake City, UT, United States, 2Utah
Center for Advanced Imaging Research, Salt Lake City,
UT, United States
We compare two methods of breast tissue segmentation: 1)
fuzzy c-mean clustering, an unsupervised learning method
that classifies voxels into a specified number of
clusters by iteratively minimizing intra-cluster
variation, and 2) the support vector machine method, a
supervised learning method that uses training data to
construct hyper-planes to minimize the margin between
classes. We also investigate the effect of varying the
number of output clusters and the combinations of input
image types. Our goal is to segment breast images into
fibroglandular tissue, fat, lesions, and skin. Among
other uses, segmentation aids magnetic resonance guided
high-intensity focused ultrasound therapy by improving
the accuracy of proton resonant frequency thermal
mapping and improving the modeling of the simulated
ultrasound beam patterns.
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2630. |
A comparative study of
undersampling schemes for magnetic resonance dynamic
contrast enhanced imaging
Sairam Geethanath1, Praveen K Gulaka1,
and Vikram D Kodibagkar1,2
1Joint graduate program in biomedical
engineering, UT Arlington and UT Southwestern Medical
Center, Dallas, Texas, United States, 2Radiology,
UT Southwestern Medical Center
Fast imaging is a prerequisite for dynamic contrast
enhanced (DCE) magnetic resonance imaging as high
temporal resolution is required for accurate estimation
of the pharmacokinetic parameters. This study involves
the investigation of the comparison of two acceleration
methods: keyhole imaging and compressed sensing (CS) as
applied to DCE. Comparison has been done with respect to
data quality and pharmacokinetic parameters for a range
of undersampling schemes. CS provides better data
quality and reproducible parametric maps at acceleration
factors of up to 5X while keyhole performs comparably up
to 3X
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2631. |
Image registration and
pharmacokinetic parameter estimation for 3D DCE-MR
mammography
Andrew Melbourne1, John Hipwell1,
Marc Modat1, Thomy Mertzanidou1,
Henkjan Huisman2, Sebastien Ourselin1,
and David Hawkes1
1University College London, London, United
Kingdom, 2Radboud
University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands
This work investigates the impact of motion artefacts by
inspecting the results of pharmacokinetic modelling
before, during and after automatic image alignment.
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2632. |
Influence of Fat-sat and
Non-fat-sat Imaging Sequences, Spatial Resolution, and
Breast Morphological Types on Density Measurements
Daniel Han-en Chang1,2, Jeon-Hor Chen1,3,
Muqing Lin1,2, Shadfar Bahri1,2,
Hon J Yu1,2, Rita S Mehta4, Ke Nie1,2,
David J.B Hsiang5, Orhan Nalcioglu1,2,
and Min-Ying Lydia Su1,2
1Tu & Yuen Center for Functional
Onco-Imaging, University of California, Irvine, CA,
United States, 2Department
of Radiological Sciences, University of California,
Irvine, CA, United States,3Department of
Radiology, China Medical University Hospital, Taichung,
Taiwan, 4Department
of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, CA,
United States, 5Department
of Surgery, University of California, Irvine, CA, United
States
The differences in breast density parameters and the
intra-rater variability analyzed on fat-sat vs.
non-fat-sat imaging sequences in women presenting
central and mixed breast morphological types were
investigated. The measured breast volume on fat-sat and
non-fat-sat sequences was almost identical; but there
was a small (<5%) difference in fibroglandular volume
and percent density, higher on fat-sat sequence.
Intra-operator variability was within 4% for both
sequences and different breast morphological types.
Analysis based on images at original and reduced spatial
resolution showed a small yet significant difference,
indicating the potential influence of partial volume
effect on density measurements.
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2633. |
Supervised Multispectral
Analysis of Breast Density in MRI
Hsian-Min Chen1, Siwa Chan2,
Jyh-Wen Chai2, Clayton Chi-Chang Chen2,
San-Kan Lee2, Chein-I Chang3,
Min-Ying Su4, Orhan Nalcioglu4,
and Jeon-Hor Chen4,5
1Department of Biomedical Engineering,
HungKuang University, Taichung, Taiwan, 2Department
of Radiology, Taichung Veterans General Hospital,
Taichung, Taiwan, 3Department
of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering,
University of Maryland, Baltimore, United States, 4Center
for Functional Onco-Imaging, University of California
Irvine, California, United States, 5Department
of Radiology, China Medical University Hospital,
Taichung, Taiwan
A supervised multispectral analysis of breast density in
MRI using ICA+SVM technique was developed. With this
approach, two sets of images (T1WI and T2WI in this
study) were needed for the analysis. ICA was used to
enhance the image contrast and used as a preprocessing
method to separate different tissue. SVM was used as a
binary classifier to maximize the margin between two
classes of data samples. In this study we have shown
that the intra- and inter-operator measurement variation
is very small. The high consistency of this method can
be potentially applied for evaluation of small breast
density change in longitudinal follow-up study.
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2634. |
Computational Simulation
of Effects of the Morphology of Fibroglandular Tissues on
Projected Breast Density Changes After Breast Compression
Based on 3D MRI
Tzu-Ching Shih1,2, Jeon-Hor Chen2,3,
Muqing Lin3, Daniel Chang3, Ke Nie3,
Orhan Nalcioglu3,4, and Min-Ying Su3
1Department of Biomedical Imaging and
Radiological Science, China Medical University,
Taichung, 40402, Taiwan, 2Department
of Radiology, China Medical University Hospital,
Taichung, 40402, Taiwan, 3Tu
& Yuen Center for Functional Onco-Imaging and Department
of Radiological Sciences, University of California,
Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697, United States, 4Department
of Cogno-Mechatronics Engineering, Pusan National
University, Busan 609-735, Korea, Republic of
Usually, a breast tumor is harder than any tissue around
it and the shape of benign masses is round or oval. By
contrast, a malignant tumor is irregular in shape and
has the invasive characteristics. Little is known about
the influence of the morphology of fiborglandular
tissues on breast density. Fibroglandular tissues would
affect breast density. Breast compression changes breast
density that indirectly influences the assessment of
breast cancer risk. Thus, the purpose of this study is
to investigate the effect of the morphology of
fibroglandular tissue on the projected breast density
after the breast compression based on a non-linear
deformation using patient-specific magnetic resonance
images.
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2635. |
Deformable Registration
with Tumor Volume Preservation in Dynamic Contrast Enhanced
MR Breast Images
Hyun Hee Jo1, and Helen Hong1
1Division of Multimedia Engineering, Seoul
Women's University, Seoul, Korea, Republic of
To preserve tumor volume in DCE-MR breast images, we
propose a demon-based deformable registration with
rigidity constraint and density correction. First, the
breast skin is extracted by using maximum gradient
profile searching and the other breast tissues are
classified into fat, muscle, glandular tissue and tumor
using k-means clustering. Then the density of each
breast tissue except tumor region is corrected by using
histogram matching. Second, the tumor is localized in
the subtracted images and is segmented in post-contrast
enhanced images. Finally, tumor regions are rigidly
transformed by averaging the magnitudes of deformation
vector fields in narrow band and the other breast
tissues are deformed by using demon-based deformable
registration. As a result, the proposed deformable
registration significantly reduces the effect of
movement artifacts in subtracted contrast-enhanced
images as well as efficiently preserves the tumor
volume. Our deformable registration can be used for
distinguishing benign lesions from malignancies and
monitoring therapy.
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2636. |
Evaluation of Spatial
Changes of Fibroglandular Tissue in the Breast between Two
Scans Using Non-rigid Registration Method
Muqing Lin1, Jeon-Hor Chen1,2,
Shadfar Bahri1, Siwa Chan3, Tzu-Ching
Shih4, Ke Nie1, Orhan Nalcioglu1,
and Min-Ying Lydia Su1
1Tu & Yuen Center for Functional Onco-Imaging
and Department of Radiological Sciences, University of
California, Irvine, CA, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, China Medical University, Taichung,
Taiwan, 3Department
of Radiology, Taichung Veterans General Hospital,
Taichung, Taiwan, 4Department
of Biomedical Imaging and Radiological Science, China
Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan
The purpose is to evaluate changes of fibroglandular
tissue in two breast MRI scans taken at different times,
to provide information about spatial change pattern of
breast density with virtual display. The registration
method is based on rigid alignment followed by non-rigid
Demons algorithm. The methods are applied to cases that
show different degrees of changes. The tool reveals
breast density atrophy in patients receiving
chemotherapy, and shows very little change between two
scans of normal volunteers with 1-week apart. This
co-registration method may provide a very useful tool
for comparing screening MRI’s taken yearly for detection
of early abnormality.
|
2637. |
Novel Variable Voxel
Intensity Correction Scheme and Application to Breast
Imaging
Anderson N Nnewihe1,2, Kyung H Sung1,
Bruce L Daniel1, and Brian A Hargreaves1
1Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford,
CA, United States, 2Bioengineering,
Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States
High-density surface coil arrays have been used for
attaining highly accelerated, high resolution images for
brain, breast and cardiac MRI studies. Due to the layout
and size of the coil elements, these arrays usually
exhibit sensitivity variations across the field of view.
In this study, we introduce a novel variable voxel size
intensity correction method that reduces intensity
variations across the image while keeping the desired
noise profile.
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Traditional Posters
: Pulse Sequences, Reconstruction & Analysis
|
Click on
to view the
abstract pdf and click on
to view the pdf of the poster viewable in the poster hall.
|
Analysis of Prostate Images
Thursday May 12th
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 15:30 |
2638. |
Prostate Cancer
Probability Estimation Based on DCE-DTI Features and
Support Vector Machine Classification
Mehdi Moradi1, Septimiu E Salcudean1,
Silvia D Chang2, Edward C Jones3,
S Larry Goldenberg4,5, and Piotr
Kozlowski2,6
1Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC,
Canada, 2Radiology,
University of British Columbia, 3Pathology
and Laboratory Medicine, University of British
Columbia, 4Urologic
Sciences, University of British Columbia, 5Vancouver
Prostate Centre, University of British Columbia, 6MRI
Research Centre, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, Canada
We use five parameters extracted from Diffusion
Tensor Imaging (DTI) and Dynamic Contrast Enhanced
(DCE) MRI for prostate cancer detection. 29 patients
were involved. The method is based on support vector
machine classification and calculation of posterior
class probabilities. These cancer probability
estimates are used for creating cancer maps
validated based on histopathologic analysis of
biopsy samples. We also found a correlation between
the proposed measure of cancer probability and the
Gleason grade of the tumors. The average probability
value was 0.555 for tumors of grade 3+3, 0.778 for
tumors of grades 3+4 and 4+3, and 0.963 for grade
4+5.
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2639. |
Multifarious Kinetic
Analysis for Differentiation of Prostate Cancer and
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia in DCE-MRI
Sang Ho Lee1, Jong Hyo Kim1,2,
Jeong Yeon Cho2,3, Sang Youn Kim2,3,
In Chan Song3, Hyeon Jin Kim3,
and Seung Hyup Kim2,3
1Interdisciplinary Program in Radiation
Applied Life Science, Seoul National University
College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea, Republic of, 2Department
of Radiology, Seoul National University College of
Medicine, Seoul, Korea, Republic of, 3Department
of Radiology, Seoul National University Hospital,
Seoul, Korea, Republic of
DCE-MRI plays an essential role for cancer detection
and characterization. The significant tissue
parameters for lesion classification may take the
form of synergistic subsets in the combinatorial
space of multifarious kinetic features. In this
study, we postulate that extending the individual
analysis schemes of contrast enhancement kinetics to
a hybrid analysis scheme and that selecting a
meaningful feature subset from a combined feature
pool may allow an improved performance for lesion
classification. Based on this postulation, we
presented a novel approach to prostate MRI
computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) using multifarious
kinetic parameters in DCE-MR images.
|
2640. |
Computerized
quantitative data integration of multi-protocol MRI for
identification of high grade prostate cancer in vivo.
Pallavi Tiwari1, John Kurhanewicz2,
and Anant Madabhushi1
1Biomedical Engineering, Rutgers
University, Piscataway, NJ, United States, 2Department
of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of
California, San Francisco, San Francisco, United
States
In this work we present a novel multi-protocol MRI
classifier, semi-supervised multi-kernel (SeSMiK),
for quantitatively combining features from T2-w
magnetic resonance (MR) imaging (T2 -w MRI) and MR
spectroscopy (MRS) data to identify high grade
prostate cancer (CaP) in vivo. High grade CaP is
known to be correlated with more biologically
aggressive prostate cancer; low grade CaP is
typically associated with indolent disease. A
computerized decision support (CDS) tool that can
distinguish high grade from low grade prostate
cancer in vivo could help identify those patients
who might benefit from a “wait and watch policy” as
opposed to those who might be better suited to
application of more aggressive treatment strategies.
The objective of this work is to build a CDS system
that can distinguish high from low grade CaP in
vivo, on a per voxel basis, using quantitative
integration of T2 -w MRI and MRS. The SeSMiK
strategy leverages multi-kernel learning (MKL) and
dimensionality reduction (DR) to provide a unified
framework for quantitative integration of T2-w MRI
and MRS. Texture and metabolic features are
extracted from T2-w MRI and MRS respectively.
Extracted features are transformed to a similarity
kernel space and then combined using MKL. The
combined T2-w MRI, MRS data is then reduced to a low
dimensional space using a DR scheme. A probabilistic
boosting tree classifier which individually
evaluated (1) T2-w MRI texture features, (2) MRS
metabolic features, and (3) combined low dimensional
features obtained via SeSMiK, suggest a higher
accuracy and area under the receiver operating curve
from SeSMiK compared to the individual T2-w MRI,MRS
modalities. Our results suggest that the SeSMiK
classifier might be able to ultimately identify
biologically aggressive CaP in vivo.
|
2641. |
Accuracy Enhancement
of Automatic Prostate Tumor Detection using Additional
Deformable Registration based Atlas Information:
Automated Classifier using Permeability Parameters.
Namkug Kim1, and JeongKon Kim1
1Radiology, University of Ulsan College
of Medicine, Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Seoul,
Korea, Republic of
The prostate is anatomically composed of central,
peripheral, and transitional zones. In the
peripheral zone, 70% of prostate cancers arise. In
addition, 20% of prostate cancers arise in the
transitional zone. To exploit this tumor occurrence
information, we evaluated accuracy enhancement for
prostate tumor detection of automated classifier
using deformable registration based atlas
information as well as permeability parameters. In
thirty seven patients with radical prostatectomy, MR
images were obtained, including T2WI and dynamic
contrast enhanced MR imaging for Brix permeability
analysis. Each prostate was manually segmented into
transitional zone and other zone by an expert
radiologist and registered by FSL FNIRT deformable
registration method. Sensitivity, specificity,
accuracy, and AUC of ROC were significantly greater
in automated classifier with atlas information
(86.5¡¾0.02%, 95.5¡¾0.01%, 92.2¡¾1.08%, 92.9¡¾0.00
respectively) than in that without atlas
information.
|
2642. |
EMPrAvISE: A
Computerized Decision Support System for Automated
Prostate Cancer Detection from Multi-Protocol MRI
Satish Viswanath1, B. Nicolas Bloch2,
Jonathan Chappelow1, Pratik Patel1,
Neil Rofsky3, Robert Lenkinski4,
Elisabeth Genega4, and Anant Madabhushi1
1Biomedical Engineering, Rutgers
University, Piscataway, NJ, United States, 2Boston
Medical Center, 3UT
Southwestern Medical Center, 4Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center
We present a novel technique, Enhanced
Multi-Protocol Analysis via Intelligent Supervised
Embedding (EMPrAvISE), for building a computerized
meta-classifier to predict the spatial extent of
prostate cancer (CaP) in vivo via multi-protocol
(T2-weighted, Dynamic Contrast Enhanced,
Diffusion-weighted) MRI data. We employ automated
registration, quantitative image descriptors, and a
novel ensemble representation technique in our
methodology. Evaluation of our automated predictions
for spatial extent of CaP at a pixel level (against
registered extents of CaP on MRI) results in
EMPrAvISE showing a statistically significant
improvement (AUC=0.73) over individual protocols
(T2w, DCE,DWI), as well as simple multi-protocol
feature concatenation.
|
2643. |
Accurate Prostate
Volume Determination from T2-w MRI using Statistical
Shape Models
Robert James Toth1, B Nicholas Bloch2,
Elizabeth M Genega3, Neil M Rofsky3,
Robert E Lenkinski3, Mark A Rosen4,
and Anant Madabhushi1
1Biomedical Engineering, Rutgers
University, New Brunswick, NJ, United States, 2Boston
Medical Center, Bostom, MA, United States, 3Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, United
States, 4Hospital
at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA,
United States
We present a method for using an advanced Active
Shape Model based segmentation scheme to determine
prostate volume on T2-weighted MR imagery. Our
method was compared to the clinically standard
ellipsoid technique and showed volume estimates more
consistent with the ground truth volumes over 34
studies.
|
2644. |
Exploration of
BOLD-MRI in Prostate Cancer using Principal Component
Analysis
Aravinthan Jegatheesan1, Michael D
Noseworthy1,2, Colm Boylan3,
Robert Shayegan4, and John F MacGregor5
1School of Biomedical Engineering,
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, 2Electrical
and Computer Engineering, McMaster University,
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, 3St.
Joseph's Healthcare, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, 4Dept.
of Urology, St. Joseph's Healthcare, Hamilton,
Ontario, Canada, 5Chemical
Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario,
Canada
Principal component analysis was used to analyze
BOLD-MRI of 5 patients with prostate tumors. The
analysis attempts to identify the most significant
temporal signatures to attempt to differentiate
normal and tumor tissue. The results indicate that
while the method maybe sensitive to a subset of
tumors, it is not robust for detecting all tumors.
|
2645. |
Determining
histology-MRI slice correspondences for mapping prostate
cancer extent in vivo
Gaoyu Xiao1, B. Nicolas Bloch2,
Jonathan Chappelow1, Elizabeth Genega3,
Neil Rofsky3, Robert Lenkinski3,
John Tomaszewski4, Michael Feldman4,
Mark Rosen4, Arjun Kalyanpur5,
and Anant Madabhushi1
1Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ,
United States, 2Boston
Medical Center, MA, USA, 3Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center, MA, USA, 4University
of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce Street, Philadelphia,
PA, USA., 5Teleradiology
Solutions Pvt. Ltd. Whitefield, Bangalore, 560048,
India
We present an automated computerized system to
automatically determine slice correspondence between
images from histology and MRI for the purpose of
mapping spatial prostate cancer extent from
wholemount histology slices to their corresponding
in vivo T2 MRI slices. The mapping of prostate
cancer extent is important in constructing
computer-aided-diagnosis system and training
radiology residents. The explicit determination of
the histology-MRI slice correspondences is
indispensable when an accurate 3D reconstruction of
the histological volume cannot be achieved because
of limited tissue slices with unknown inter-slice
spacing, and histological image. The image slice
correspondences obtained using our method were very
close to the ground truth by medical experts.
|
2646. |
Automatic Arterial
Input Function Detection for Prostate Dynamic Contrast
Enhanced MRI
Yingxuan Zhu1, Ming-Ching Chang2,
Fiona M Fennessy3, and Sandeep Narendra
Gupta4
1Dept. of EECS, Syracuse University,
Syracuse, NY, United States, 2Vis.
and Comp. Vision Lab, GE Global Research Center,
Niskayuna, NY, United States, 3Dept.
of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston,
MA, United States, 4Functional
Imaging Lab, GE Global Research Center, Niskayuna,
NY, United States
Dynamic Contrast Enhanced MRI has shown promise in
non-invasive assessment of tumor vascular properties
for prostate cancer staging and treatment
monitoring. Accurate quantification from DCEMRI
requires the determination of arterial input
function. AIF is commonly measured manually by
selecting an ROI, which is time consuming and
subjective. Automated ways of measuring AIF would be
useful. This is challenging because of extreme
intensity non-uniformity. Therefore existing methods
do not perform well. Here, we use both temporal and
spatial information to determine the AIF. We
validate our method on clinical data and compare our
approach with expert user defined manual AIFs.
|
2647. |
CADOnc: A Computerized
Decision Support System for Quantifying Radiation
Therapy Changes in the Prostate via Multi-Parametric MRI
Satish Viswanath1, Jonathan Chappelow1,
Pallavi Tiwari1, John Kurhanewicz2,
and Anant Madabhushi1
1Biomedical Engineering, Rutgers
University, Piscataway, NJ, United States, 2University
of California, San Francisco
We present CADOnc©, a novel computerized
segmentation, registration, and classification
framework for quantifying changes in the prostate
due to radiation therapy (RT) via multi-parametric
MRI (Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, T2-weighted,
Diffusion-weighted). On a small preliminary cohort
of patient data, CADOnc© accurately quantified
changes in specific multi-parametric MRI biomarkers,
for both pre- and post-RT data. Further,
quantitatively integrating these markers shows
excellent utility in (1) predicting disease extent
on pre-RT data, and (2) quantifying both residual
and possible new foci of disease, post-RT.
|
2648. |
Rapid Quantitative T2
imaging of prostate cancer using a reduced FOV
single-shot fast-spin-echo sequence
Lawrence Patrick Panych1, Renxin Chu1,
Yi Tang1, Stephan E Maier1,
Clare M Tempany1, and Robert V Mulkern2
1Radiology, Brigham and Womens Hospital,
Boston, MA, United States, 2Radiology,
Children's Hospital, Boston, MA, United States
A reduced field-of-view single-shot fast-spin-echo
sequence was implemented and applied for T2
quantification in the prostate. Six patients with
biopsy-proven prostate cancer were imaged, acquiring
whole-gland multiple-TE images in around one minute.
Apparent T2 values were estimated from the multi-TE
data for regions selected as being suspected healthy
(SH) and suspected cancerous (SC). The apparent T2
in the SH regions was estimated at 224 +/- 67 msec
and 129 +/- 25 msec in the SC regions. Sensitivity
and specificity for detection of cancerous tissue is
estimated to be 82% and 80% with this sequence.
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Traditional Posters
: Pulse Sequences, Reconstruction & Analysis
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Click on
to view the
abstract pdf and click on
to view the pdf of the poster viewable in the poster hall.
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Neuro MRI: Applications & Evaluations
Monday May 9th
Exhibition Hall |
14:00 - 16:00 |
2649. |
Real-FLAIR: Real-part
Imaging for Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery Sequence
Tokunori Kimura1, and Mitsukazu Kamata1
1MRI development department, Toshiba
Medical Systems corp., Otawara, Tochigi, Japan
A real-part imaging for inversion recovery (real-IR)
is known that clinically useful to provide higher
T1W contrasts than the magnitude-based IR especially
for brain. Fluid attenuated inversion recovery
(FLAIR) is one of inversion recovery (IR) sequences.
In this study, we applied real-IR technique to
Fast-Spin echo (FSE) based interleaved FLAIR
sequence and assessed for tissue contrasts by
volunteer brain study on 1.5T and 3T. We concluded
that real-FLAIR imaging has more advantageous than
the magnitude-based FLAIR imaging from the points of
tissue contrast enhancement, robust against TI
setting, and in addition, reducing CSF inflow
artifacts.
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2650. |
3D Flow-dephased Fast
Spin Echo for MR Neurography: a Feasibility Study
Zhikui Xiao1, Lou Xin2, Shen
Hao1, and Cao Guang1
1Global Applied Science Laboratory, GE
Healthcare, Beijing, Beijing, China, People's
Republic of, 2Department
of Radiology, PLA General Hospital, Beijing,
Beijing, China, People's Republic of
In this work, we implemented a 3D flow-dephasing
prepared FSE sequence by adding a flow dephasing
preparation pulse prior to 3D-FSE acquisition. This
enables better blood signal suppression for
isotropic high spatial resolution nerve imaging at
3.0T. In-vivo lumbosacral plexus results are shown
to evaluate the proposed scheme. We show that flow-dephasing
prepared image present significantly better blood
vessel signal suppression with high spatial
resolution.
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2651. |
EVALUATION OF NEONATAL
PATHOLOGY USING T1 WEIGHTED TECHNIQUES, SNAPIR AND
GRADIENT ECHO
Amy Kathleen McGuinness1, Christina
Malamateniou1, Joanna M Allsop1,
Serena J Counsell1, Rita G Nunes1,
Zhi Q Wu1, Nora Tusor2, Ash
Ederies2, Jo V Hajnal1, and
Mary A Rutherford1
1Imaging Sciences Department, MRC
Clinical Sciences Centre, Hammersmith Hospital,
Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom, 2Neonatal
Imaging Group, Hammersmith Hospital, Imperial
College London, London, United Kingdom
SNAPIR, an optimized single-shot T1-weighted
acquisition, improves normal brain anatomy
delineation in cases of fetal motion compared to a
standard T1-weighted gradient echo (T1W-GE)
protocol. However, the role of SNAPIR in neonatal
imaging where motion may also be an issue has not
yet been established. The aim of this study was to
evaluate and compare neonatal brain pathology
delineation using SNAPIR and a standard T1W-GE
protocol, the MP-RAGE. In the absence of motion
MP-RAGE is the preferred sequence. However, SNAPIR
is almost as sensitive in many pathologies and is a
robust technique when motion degrades T1W GE
protocols.
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2652. |
3D DIR: 3D Double
Inversion Recovery in Multiple Sclerosis
Paul Polak1, Robert Zivadinov1,2,
and Guy Poloni1
1Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center,
Department of Neurology, University at Buffalo,
State University of New York, Buffalo, NY, United
States, 2The
Jacobs Neurological Institute, Department of
Neurology, University at Buffalo, State University
of New York, Buffalo, NY, United States
Multiple Sclerosis is believed to be a chronic,
autoimmune, neurodegenerative disease of the CNS.
Approaches that monitor disease progression in the
white matter tissue via T2-weighed imaging suffer
from the clinical/radiological paradox, in that poor
or no correlation is found between clinical outcomes
and MR metrics. We propose using an experimental
method to optimize lesion contrast in white and grey
matter tissues, using regions of interest analysis.
Using the resulting data we propose a set of 3D DIR
sequence parameters designed to improve the
detection of clinically significant lesions in both
white and grey matter.
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2653. |
3D FLAIR-ED: 3D Fluid
Attenuated Inversion Recovery for Enhanced Detection of
Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
Paul Polak1, Robert Zivadinov1,2,
and Guy Poloni1
1Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center,
Department of Neurology, University at Buffalo,
State University of New York, Buffalo, NY, United
States, 2The
Jacobs Neurological Institute, Department of
Neurology, University at Buffalo, State University
of New York, Buffalo, NY, United States
Detection of brain tissue lesions via T2-weighted
imaging is standard clinical practice in diagnosing
and prognosis of multiple sclerosis. However, these
methods suffer from the clinical/radiological
paradox, in that poor or no correlation is found
between clinical outcomes and MR metrics. Improving
lesion sensitivity in MR techniques may help resolve
this conflict. We propose an experimental method to
optimize lesion contrast in a 3D FLAIR sequence
using a region of interest analysis to optimize
sequence parameters. The derived 3D FLAIR imaging
sequence is superior to current clinical 2D and 3D
FLAIR sequences, in both detection power and
resolution.
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2654. |
Signal and Contrast
Optimized Inversion Prepared Imaging
Albert Kir1,2, and Alan Blair McMillan1
1Magnetic Resonance Research Center,
Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine,
University of Maryland School of Medicine,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science, University of
Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD, United
States
Previous studies investigating optimized rapid 3D
inversion-prepared gradient echo imaging sequences
have relied upon the assumption of ideal
radio-frequency (RF) spoiling. In this work, a new
simulation approach based on the extended phase
graph (EPG) formalism, which considers the effect of
residual transverse magnetization, is used to
predict both signal levels and contrast. We
conducted phantom and in vivo brain studies to
validate and verify the improvement of the proposed
approach over approaches based on ideal RF spoiling,
to generate images with optimal SNR, tissue
contrast, and acquisition time.
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2655. |
Correlation of Phase
values with CT Hounsfield and R2* values in calcified
Neurocysticercosis
Bhashwati Roy1, Sanjay Verma2,
Rishi Awasthi1, Ram KS Rathore2,
Ramesh Venkatesan3, SA Yoganathan4,
KJ Maria Das4, Kashi Nath Prasad5,
and Rakesh Kumar Gupta1
1Radiodiagnosis, Sanjay Gandhi Post
Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow,
India, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India, 2Mathematics
& Statistics, Indian Institute of Technology,
Kanpur, Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India, 3Wipro-GE
Healthcare, Bangalore, Karnataka, India, 4Radiotherapy,
Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Sciences, Lucknow, India, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh,
India, 5Microbiology,
Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Sciences, Lucknow, India, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh,
India
A total of 35 patients having fifty two calcified
cysts were imaged using conventional and T2 star
weighted angiography, used for extracting phase
images. A significant correlation between
CT-Hounsfield values and phase values proves the
sensitivity of phase imaging in detecting presence
calcification in a lesion as that of CT. In addition
its ability to differentiate between diamagnetic and
paramagnetic minerals gives phase imaging an edge
over CT in demonstrating these lesions.
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2656. |
Single Phase 3D
contrast-enhanced Intracranial Magnetic Resonance
Angiography With Undersampled SWIRLS Trajectory at 3T
Yunhong Shu1, Joshua D Trzasko1,
John III Huston1, Armando Manduca1,
and Matt A Bernstein1
1Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN,
United States
The purpose of this work is to explore the
feasibility of applying an undersampled spherical
SWIRLS trajectory to CE-MRA applications at 3T.
NUFFT reconstruction and off-resonance correction
was used to further improve the image quality.
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Traditional Posters
: Pulse Sequences, Reconstruction & Analysis
|
Click on
to view the
abstract pdf and click on
to view the pdf of the poster viewable in the poster hall.
|
Susceptibility MRI: Applications & Evaluations
Tuesday May 10th
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 15:30 |
2657. |
Harmonic phase subtraction
methods are prone to B1 background
components
Ferdinand Schweser1,2, Marie Atterbury1,3,
Andreas Deistung1, Berengar Wendel Lehr1,
Karsten Sommer1,4, and Jürgen R. Reichenbach1
1Medical Physics Group, Dept. of Diagnostic
and Interventional Radiology 1, Jena University
Hospital, Jena, Germany, 2School
of Medicine, Friedrich Schiller University of Jena,
Jena, Germany,3Dept. of Physics, Brown
University, Providence, RI, Germany, 4School
of Physics and Astronomy, Friedrich Schiller University
of Jena, Jena, Germany
In this contribution we investigate the effect of the B1
radio frequency (RF) signal induced phase offset on the
results of two recently presented preprocessing methods
for GRE phase data, namely SHARP and PDF. Furthermore,
it is shown that these methods are mathematically
equivalent.
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2658. |
Whole-brain voxel-based
Susceptibility-Weighted Imaging (SWI) analysis: normal
cortical and subcortical values, and preliminary results in
post-traumatic epilepsy
Hugo Alexandre Ferreira1, Alexandre Andrade1,
Rui M Manaças2,3, and Pedro Miguel
Gonçalves-Pereira3,4
1Instituto de Biofísica e Engenharia
Biomédica, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de
Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal, 2Serviço
de Neurorradiologia, Hospital dos Capuchos, Lisboa,
Portugal, 3Serviço
de Radiologia, Hospital dos Lusíadas, Lisboa, Portugal, 4Escola
Superior de Tecnologias da Saúde, Instituto Politécnico
de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal
An automated voxel-based analysis method of
Susceptibility-Weighted Imaging (SWI) data was developed
in combination with automated masks of brain structures
to determine normal tissue values. Significant changes
were observed with age and gender. A preliminary study
comparing normal subjects to post-traumatic epilepsy (PTE)
patients demonstrated changes in tissue magnetic
susceptibility within limbic and mesencephalic
structures.
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2659. |
Comparison of
susceptibility gradient mapping and off-resonance excitation
for quantitative positive contrast MRI of magnetotactic
bacteria
Sonal Josan1,2, Amanda Hamilton3,
Michael Benoit3, Charles Cunningham4,
Daniel Spielman2, A.C. Matin3, and
Dirk Mayer1,2
1SRI International, Menlo Park, CA, United
States, 2Radiology,
Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States, 3Microbiology
and Immunology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA,
United States,4Sunnybrook Health Sciences
Center, Toronto, ON, Canada
This work compares two positive contrast imaging
techniques for quantitative detection of endogenous
magnetite particles generaated by magnetotactic
bacteria: off-resonance excitation and susceptibility
gradient mapping (SGM). Off-resonance excitation uses
spectral-spatial pulses to excite and refocus the
off-resonant water protons near the magnetite particles
while the SGM method involves post-processing of
conventional 3D gradient echo images to calculate
susceptibility gradients induced by the particles. Both
techniques visualize the magnetite spots and provide
good background suppression. Both methods demonstrated a
linear correlation, but with different slopes, between
iron concentration and the integrated signal intensity
of “positive contrast voxels†at the spot location.
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2660. |
Orientation effects on the
local magnetic field or phase and T2*-weighted hypointensity
of gradient echo imaging and their removal in quantitative
susceptibility mapping
Jianqi Li1, Tian Liu2,3, Deqi Cui2,3,
Qianfeng Wang1, Mengchao Pei1,
Ming Zhang1, and Yi Wang2,3
1Shanghai Key Laboratory of Magnetic
Resonance, East China Normal University, Shanghai,
Shanghai, China, People's Republic of, 2Radiology,
Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York,
NY, United States, 3Biomedical
Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United
States
GRE is a commonly used pulse sequence in MRI. Both
T2*-weighted hypointensity and phase contrast in the GRE
images depend on relative orientation with respect to
B0, and on the relative geometry between observation
voxel and susceptibility source. We here illustrate the
orientation effects on the induced local field or phase,
T2* hypointensity, susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI)
and quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM). The
shapes measured by the magnitude image and SWI and the
induced field pattern varied strong with the orientation
w.r.t. B0 or the blooming artifacts were strongly
orientation-depended. The QSM removed the blooming
artifacts and the calculated shapes didn¡¯t depend on
the orientations.
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2661. |
Fast whole brain
susceptibility imaging using 3D spiral
bing Wu1, Wei Li1, Alex Avram1,
Arnaud Guidon1, and Chunlei Liu1
1Brain imaging and analysis center, Duke
University, Durham, NC, United States
Quantitative susceptibility mapping are usually
calculated using the phase information obtained using 3D
SPGR, which features long scan time due to the long echo
time required and the line by line sample acquisition
nature. We show the use of a 3D stack-of-spiral sequence
may be a much more time efficient substitute to 3D SPGR.
In an experiment conducted, very similar susceptibility
maps, both qualitatively and quantitatively, are
obtained using 3D SPGR and 3D spiral. However the 3D
spiral sequence features a 13 times shorter scan time
comparing to 3D SPGR for the same brain region coverage.
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2662. |
Quantitative
Susceptibility Mapping of Cerebral Microbleeds
Tian Liu1,2, Krishna Surapaneni3,
Min Lou4, Liuquan Cheng5,
Jianzhong Sun6, Cynthia Wisnieff1,2,
Craig Horenstein3, Minming Zhang6,
and Yi Wang1,2
1Biomedical Engineering, Cornell University,
Ithaca, NY, United States, 2Radiology,
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, United
States, 3Radiology,
Columbia University, New York, NY, United States, 4Neurology,
The Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University
School of Medicine, Hang Zhou, Zhe Jiang, China,
People's Republic of, 5Radiology,
PLA General Hospital, Beijing, China, People's Republic
of, 6Radiology,
The Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University
School of Medicine, Hang Zhou, Zhe Jiang, China,
People's Republic of
Gradient echo(GRE) MRI is the method of choice for
detecting cerebral microbleeds(CMB) due to its
sensitivity to the paramagnetic intreaparenchymal
hemosiderin deposits. However, the hypointensity
associated with CMB on a GRE image is highly dependent
on the choice of echo time. In this study, we propose to
use quantitative susceptibility mapping(QSM) as a more
objective measurement of CMBs because the underlying
susceptibility is theoretically independent of imaging
parameter. Comparison of the T2* weighted image (T2*w),
susceptibility weighted image (SWI) and R2* map showed
the total susceptibility of a CMB varies the least with
varying TEs.
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