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Human Coronary Plaque Optical Coherence Tomography Image Repairing, Multilayer Segmentation and Impact on Plaque Stress/Strain Calculations.

Authors :
Huang, Mengde
Maehara, Akiko
Tang, Dalin
Zhu, Jian
Wang, Liang
Lv, Rui
Zhu, Yanwen
Zhang, Xiaoguo
Matsumura, Mitsuaki
Chen, Lijuan
Ma, Genshan
Mintz, Gary S.
Source :
Journal of Functional Biomaterials; Dec2022, Vol. 13 Issue 4, p213, 14p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Coronary vessel layer structure may have a considerable impact on plaque stress/strain calculations. Most current plaque models use single-layer vessel structures due to the lack of available multilayer segmentation techniques. In this paper, an automatic multilayer segmentation and repair method was developed to segment coronary optical coherence tomography (OCT) images to obtain multilayer vessel geometries for biomechanical model construction. Intravascular OCT data were acquired from six patients (one male; mean age: 70.0) using a protocol approved by the local institutional review board with informed consent obtained. A total of 436 OCT slices were selected in this study. Manually segmented data were used as the gold standard for method development and validation. The edge detection method and cubic spline surface fitting were applied to detect and repair the internal elastic membrane (IEM), external elastic membrane (EEM) and adventitia–periadventitia interface (ADV). The mean errors of automatic contours compared to manually segmented contours were 1.40%, 4.34% and 6.97%, respectively. The single-layer mean plaque stress value from lumen was 117.91 kPa, 10.79% lower than that from three-layer models (132.33 kPa). On the adventitia, the single-layer mean plaque stress value was 50.46 kPa, 156.28% higher than that from three-layer models (19.74 kPa). The proposed segmentation technique may have wide applications in vulnerable plaque research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20794983
Volume :
13
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Functional Biomaterials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160977789
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jfb13040213