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1.
Invest Radiol ; 48(9): 661-70, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23666092

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Sensitivity of noncontrast computed tomography (NCCT) in detecting hyperacute (< 8 hours) and acute (< 24 hours) cerebral infarction is low. We propose an automatic method to detect and localize ischemic infarct and to assess its volume from a single NCCT scan. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The method automatically determines attenuation value ranges of cerebrospinal fluid and white and gray matter, separates the brain scan into the left and right hemispheres, and by analyzing hemisphere attenuation value distributions using percentile difference ratios, it detects, localizes, and quantifies the infarct without its segmentation. The method performance was evaluated on 576 patients with clinically confirmed stroke through NCCT scans acquired at 4 centers to measure how it matched with that of experts in detection, localization, and assessment of infarct volume. The time from the onset of symptoms ranged from 1.5 to 72 hours for 450 scans and more than 72 hours for 82 scans, most with pathologic findings in addition to cerebral infarction; the time was unavailable for 44 scans. In addition, the method was compared with the novice's (with 52 scans) and experienced readers' infarct detection (with 21 × 2 scans) in early ischemia detection (with the time from the onset of symptoms ranging from 1.5 to 7 hours). RESULTS: The method matches 100% the expert's infarct detection when chronic infarcts, leukoaraiosis cases, and infarct volumes less than 2 cm (determined by detection accuracy simulation) are excluded from the analysis. For all cases excluding infarct volumes less than 2 cm, the method detection accuracy is 95.7%. Overall, the method detection accuracy is 83.2%. The early method detection accuracy (≤ 3 hours) is 78.4%. The novice detection accuracy is 27.8% (≤ 3 hours), 37.5% (3 < to ≤ 8 hours), and 77.8% (> 8 hours), whereas the expert detection accuracy for these cases is 100%. Moreover, the method detected all 21 early infarcts, of which 15 were missed by the stroke experts and 14 of 15 were missed by a general radiologist. The method performs automatic analysis in approximately 7 seconds. CONCLUSIONS: The results demonstrate potential benefits of our method for enhancing expert's performance because it quickly localizes the infarct and detects cases missed by experts, and it is to be considered as an aid in the emergency department because it substantially outperforms novice readers (100% vs 27%) in infarct detection on NCCT.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Cerebral Angiography/methods , Cerebral Infarction/diagnostic imaging , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Pattern Recognition, Automated/methods , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Contrast Media , Humans , Image Enhancement/methods , Pilot Projects , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
2.
J Neurosci Methods ; 215(1): 12-8, 2013 Apr 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23416136

ABSTRACT

Three-dimensional (3D) relationships between head muscles and cranial nerves innervating them are complicated. Existing sources present these relationships in illustrations, radiologic scans, or autopsy photographs, which are limited for learning and use. Developed electronic atlases are limited in content, quality, functionality, and/or presentation. We create a truly 3D interactive, stereotactic and high quality atlas, which provides spatial relationships among head muscles, glands and cranial nerves, and correlates them to surface and sectional neuroanatomy. The head muscles and glands were created from a 3T scan by contouring them and generating 3D models. They were named and structured according to Terminologia anatomica. The muscles were divided into: extra-ocular, facial, masticatory and other muscles, and glands into mouth and other glands. The muscles, glands (and also head) were placed in a stereotactic coordinate system. This content was integrated with cranial nerves and neuroanatomy created earlier. To explore this complex content, a scalable user interface was designed with 12 modules including central nervous system (cerebrum, cerebellum, brainstem, spinal cord), cranial nerves, muscles, glands, arterial system, venous system, tracts, deep gray nuclei, ventricles, white matter, visual system, head. Anatomy exploration operations include compositing/decompositing, individual/group selection, 3D view-index mapping, 3D labeling, highlighting, distance measuring, 3D brain cutting, and axial/coronal/sagittal triplanar display. To our best knowledge, this is the first truly 3D, stereotactic, interactive, fairly complete atlas of head muscles, and the first attempt to create a 3D stereotactic atlas of glands. Its use ranges from education of students and patients to research to potential clinical applications.


Subject(s)
Atlases as Topic , Cranial Nerves/anatomy & histology , Head/anatomy & histology , Lacrimal Apparatus/anatomy & histology , Muscle, Skeletal/anatomy & histology , Neuroanatomy/methods , Salivary Glands/anatomy & histology , Stereotaxic Techniques , Echo-Planar Imaging , Facial Muscles/anatomy & histology , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Masticatory Muscles/anatomy & histology
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