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Spatio-temporal analysis tool for modeling pulmonary nodules in MR images

Authors :
Fillia Makedon
Li Shen
Wei Zheng
Chia-Hsin Lu
Justin D. Pearlman
Ling Gao
James Ford
Heng Huang
Source :
Medical Imaging: Image-Guided Procedures
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
SPIE, 2006.

Abstract

To detect lung cancer at an earlier stage, a promising method is to apply perfusion magnetic resonance imaging (pMRI) modified to assess tumor angiogenesis. One key issue is to effectively characterize angiogenic patterns of pulmonary nodules. Based on our previous study addressing this issue, in this work, we develop STAT, a Spatio-Temporal Analysis Tool that implements not only our previously proposed pulmonary nodule modeling framework but also a user friendly interface and many extended functions. Our goal is to make STAT an easy-to-use tool that can be applied to more general cases. STAT employs the following overall strategy for modeling pulmonary nodules: (1) nodule identification using a correlation maximization method, (2) nodule segmentation using edge detection, morphological operations and model-based strategy, and (3) nodule registration using landmark approach and thin-plate spline interpolation. In nodule identification, STAT provides new schemes for selecting the template and refining results in difficult cases. In nodule segmentation, STAT provides additional flexibilities for creating the weighting mask, selecting morphological structure elements and individually fixing segmentation result. In nodule registration, our previous study uses principal component analysis for landmark extraction, which may not work in general. To overcome this limitation, STAT provides an enhanced approach that minimizes the bending energy of the thin plate spline interpolation or mean square distance between each landmark set and the template set. Our main application of STAT is to define blood arrival patterns in the lung to identify tumor angiogenesis as a means of early accurate diagnosis of cancer.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bb0b11970f6098f3a5d0ab8fa4bfe27c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.654469