A 2D driven 3D vessel segmentation algorithm for 3D digital subtraction angiography data

Spiegel M, Redel T, Struffert T, Hornegger J, Dörfler A (2011)


Publication Type: Journal article, Original article

Publication year: 2011

Journal

Original Authors: Spiegel M., Redel T., Struffert T., Hornegger J., Doerfler A.

Publisher: Institute of Physics: Hybrid Open Access

Book Volume: 56

Pages Range: 6401-6419

Journal Issue: 19

DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/56/19/015

Abstract

Cerebrovascular disease is among the leading causes of death in western industrial nations. 3D rotational angiography delivers indispensable information on vessel morphology and pathology. Physicians make use of this to analyze vessel geometry in detail, i.e. vessel diameters, location and size of aneurysms, to come up with a clinical decision. 3D segmentation is a crucial step in this pipeline. Although a lot of different methods are available nowadays, all of them lack a method to validate the results for the individual patient. Therefore, we propose a novel 2D digital subtraction angiography (DSA)-driven 3D vessel segmentation and validation framework. 2D DSA projections are clinically considered as gold standard when it comes to measurements of vessel diameter or the neck size of aneurysms. An ellipsoid vessel model is applied to deliver the initial 3D segmentation. To assess the accuracy of the 3D vessel segmentation, its forward projections are iteratively overlaid with the corresponding 2D DSA projections. Local vessel discrepancies are modeled by a global 2D/3D optimization function to adjust the 3D vessel segmentation toward the 2D vessel contours. Our framework has been evaluated on phantom data as well as on ten patient datasets. Three 2D DSA projections from varying viewing angles have been used for each dataset. The novel 2D driven 3D vessel segmentation approach shows superior results against state-of-the-art segmentations like region growing, i.e. an improvement of 7.2% points in precision and 5.8% points for the Dice coefficient. This method opens up future clinical applications requiring the greatest vessel accuracy, e.g. computational fluid dynamic modeling. © 2011 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.

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APA:

Spiegel, M., Redel, T., Struffert, T., Hornegger, J., & Dörfler, A. (2011). A 2D driven 3D vessel segmentation algorithm for 3D digital subtraction angiography data. Physics in Medicine and Biology, 56(19), 6401-6419. https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/56/19/015

MLA:

Spiegel, Martin, et al. "A 2D driven 3D vessel segmentation algorithm for 3D digital subtraction angiography data." Physics in Medicine and Biology 56.19 (2011): 6401-6419.

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