A tubular structure segmentation method utilizing a second-order tensor achieved 96.4% average overlap with expert-delineated ground truth in the Rotterdam Coronary Artery Algorithm Evaluation.
Does an intensity-based tensor model improve vessel tractography and branch detection in CTA volumes?
The proposed intensity-based tensor model achieves high accuracy (96.4% overlap) in segmenting coronary arteries and detecting branches in CTA volumes.
In this paper, we present a tubular structure segmentation method that utilizes a second order tensor constructed from directional intensity measurements, which is inspired from diffusion tensor image (DTI) modeling. The constructed anisotropic tensor which is fit inside a vessel drives the segmentation analogously to a tractography approach in DTI. Our model is initialized at a single seed point and is capable of capturing whole vessel trees by an automatic branch detection algorithm developed in the same framework. The centerline of the vessel as well as its thickness is extracted. Performance results within the Rotterdam Coronary Artery Algorithm Evaluation framework are provided for comparison with existing techniques. 96.4% average overlap with ground truth delineated by experts is obtained in addition to other measures reported in the paper. Moreover, we demonstrate further quantitative results over synthetic vascular datasets, and we provide quantitative experiments for branch detection on patient computed tomography angiography (CTA) volumes, as well as qualitative evaluations on the same CTA datasets, from visual scores by a cardiologist expert.
Çetin et al. (Wed,) conducted a other in Vascular imaging. Intensity based tensor model with branch detection vs. Existing techniques was evaluated on Average overlap with ground truth delineated by experts. A tubular structure segmentation method utilizing a second-order tensor achieved 96.4% average overlap with expert-delineated ground truth in the Rotterdam Coronary Artery Algorithm Evaluation.
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