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    The Influence of Inaccuracies in Carotid MRI Segmentation on Atherosclerotic Plaque Stress Computations

    Source: Journal of Biomechanical Engineering:;2014:;volume( 136 ):;issue: 002::page 21015
    Author:
    Nieuwstadt, Harm A.
    ,
    Speelman, Lambert
    ,
    Breeuwer, Marcel
    ,
    van der Lugt, Aad
    ,
    van der Steen, Anton F. W.
    ,
    Wentzel, Jolanda J.
    ,
    Gijsen, Frank J. H.
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4026178
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Biomechanical finite element analysis (FEA) based on in vivo carotid magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be used to assess carotid plaque vulnerability noninvasively by computing peak cap stress. However, the accuracy of MRI plaque segmentation and the influence this has on FEA has remained unreported due to the lack of a reliable submillimeter ground truth. In this study, we quantify this influence using novel numerical simulations of carotid MRI. Histological sections from carotid plaques from 12 patients were used to create 33 ground truth plaque models. These models were subjected to numerical computer simulations of a currently used clinically applied 3.0 T T1weighted blackblood carotid MRI protocol (inplane acquisition voxel size of 0.62 أ— 0.62 mm2) to generate simulated in vivo MR images from a known underlying ground truth. The simulated images were manually segmented by three MRI readers. FEA models based on the MRI segmentations were compared with the FEA models based on the ground truth. MRIbased FEA model peak cap stress was consistently underestimated, but still correlated (R) moderately with the ground truth stress: R = 0.71, R = 0.47, and R = 0.76 for the three MRI readers respectively (p < 0.01). Peak plaque stretch was underestimated as well. The peak cap stress in thickcap, low stress plaques was substantially more accurately and precisely predicted (error of −12 آ±â€‰44 kPa) than the peak cap stress in plaques with caps thinner than the acquisition voxel size (error of −177 آ±â€‰168 kPa). For reliable MRIbased FEA to compute the peak cap stress of carotid plaques with thin caps, the current clinically used inplane acquisition voxel size (∼0.6 mm) is inadequate. FEA plaque stress computations would be considerably more reliable if they would be used to identify thickcap carotid plaques with low stresses instead.
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      The Influence of Inaccuracies in Carotid MRI Segmentation on Atherosclerotic Plaque Stress Computations

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/153954
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    contributor authorNieuwstadt, Harm A.
    contributor authorSpeelman, Lambert
    contributor authorBreeuwer, Marcel
    contributor authorvan der Lugt, Aad
    contributor authorvan der Steen, Anton F. W.
    contributor authorWentzel, Jolanda J.
    contributor authorGijsen, Frank J. H.
    date accessioned2017-05-09T01:05:16Z
    date available2017-05-09T01:05:16Z
    date issued2014
    identifier issn0148-0731
    identifier otherbio_136_02_021015.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/153954
    description abstractBiomechanical finite element analysis (FEA) based on in vivo carotid magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be used to assess carotid plaque vulnerability noninvasively by computing peak cap stress. However, the accuracy of MRI plaque segmentation and the influence this has on FEA has remained unreported due to the lack of a reliable submillimeter ground truth. In this study, we quantify this influence using novel numerical simulations of carotid MRI. Histological sections from carotid plaques from 12 patients were used to create 33 ground truth plaque models. These models were subjected to numerical computer simulations of a currently used clinically applied 3.0 T T1weighted blackblood carotid MRI protocol (inplane acquisition voxel size of 0.62 أ— 0.62 mm2) to generate simulated in vivo MR images from a known underlying ground truth. The simulated images were manually segmented by three MRI readers. FEA models based on the MRI segmentations were compared with the FEA models based on the ground truth. MRIbased FEA model peak cap stress was consistently underestimated, but still correlated (R) moderately with the ground truth stress: R = 0.71, R = 0.47, and R = 0.76 for the three MRI readers respectively (p < 0.01). Peak plaque stretch was underestimated as well. The peak cap stress in thickcap, low stress plaques was substantially more accurately and precisely predicted (error of −12 آ±â€‰44 kPa) than the peak cap stress in plaques with caps thinner than the acquisition voxel size (error of −177 آ±â€‰168 kPa). For reliable MRIbased FEA to compute the peak cap stress of carotid plaques with thin caps, the current clinically used inplane acquisition voxel size (∼0.6 mm) is inadequate. FEA plaque stress computations would be considerably more reliable if they would be used to identify thickcap carotid plaques with low stresses instead.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleThe Influence of Inaccuracies in Carotid MRI Segmentation on Atherosclerotic Plaque Stress Computations
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume136
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Biomechanical Engineering
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4026178
    journal fristpage21015
    journal lastpage21015
    identifier eissn1528-8951
    treeJournal of Biomechanical Engineering:;2014:;volume( 136 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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