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1.
Front Psychiatry ; 15: 1255370, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38585483

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Approximately one in six people will experience an episode of major depressive disorder (MDD) in their lifetime. Effective treatment is hindered by subjective clinical decision-making and a lack of objective prognostic biomarkers. Functional MRI (fMRI) could provide such an objective measure but the majority of MDD studies has focused on static approaches, disregarding the rapidly changing nature of the brain. In this study, we aim to predict depression severity changes at 3 and 6 months using dynamic fMRI features. Methods: For our research, we acquired a longitudinal dataset of 32 MDD patients with fMRI scans acquired at baseline and clinical follow-ups 3 and 6 months later. Several measures were derived from an emotion face-matching fMRI dataset: activity in brain regions, static and dynamic functional connectivity between functional brain networks (FBNs) and two measures from a wavelet coherence analysis approach. All fMRI features were evaluated independently, with and without demographic and clinical parameters. Patients were divided into two classes based on changes in depression severity at both follow-ups. Results: The number of coherence clusters (nCC) between FBNs, reflecting the total number of interactions (either synchronous, anti-synchronous or causal), resulted in the highest predictive performance. The nCC-based classifier achieved 87.5% and 77.4% accuracy for the 3- and 6-months change in severity, respectively. Furthermore, regression analyses supported the potential of nCC for predicting depression severity on a continuous scale. The posterior default mode network (DMN), dorsal attention network (DAN) and two visual networks were the most important networks in the optimal nCC models. Reduced nCC was associated with a poorer depression course, suggesting deficits in sustained attention to and coping with emotion-related faces. An ensemble of classifiers with demographic, clinical and lead coherence features, a measure of dynamic causality, resulted in a 3-months clinical outcome prediction accuracy of 81.2%. Discussion: The dynamic wavelet features demonstrated high accuracy in predicting individual depression severity change. Features describing brain dynamics could enhance understanding of depression and support clinical decision-making. Further studies are required to evaluate their robustness and replicability in larger cohorts.

2.
Invest Radiol ; 2024 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38687025

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Dark-blood late gadolinium enhancement (DB-LGE) cardiac magnetic resonance has been proposed as an alternative to standard white-blood LGE (WB-LGE) imaging protocols to enhance scar-to-blood contrast without compromising scar-to-myocardium contrast. In practice, both DB and WB contrasts may have clinical utility, but acquiring both has the drawback of additional acquisition time. The aim of this study was to develop and evaluate a deep learning method to generate synthetic WB-LGE images from DB-LGE, allowing the assessment of both contrasts without additional scan time. MATERIALS AND METHODS: DB-LGE and WB-LGE data from 215 patients were used to train 2 types of unpaired image-to-image translation deep learning models, cycle-consistent generative adversarial network (CycleGAN) and contrastive unpaired translation, with 5 different loss function hyperparameter settings each. Initially, the best hyperparameter setting was determined for each model type based on the Fréchet inception distance and the visual assessment of expert readers. Then, the CycleGAN and contrastive unpaired translation models with the optimal hyperparameters were directly compared. Finally, with the best model chosen, the quantification of scar based on the synthetic WB-LGE images was compared with the truly acquired WB-LGE. RESULTS: The CycleGAN architecture for unpaired image-to-image translation was found to provide the most realistic synthetic WB-LGE images from DB-LGE images. The results showed that it was difficult for visual readers to distinguish if an image was true or synthetic (55% correctly classified). In addition, scar burden quantification with the synthetic data was highly correlated with the analysis of the truly acquired images. Bland-Altman analysis found a mean bias in percentage scar burden between the quantification of the real WB and synthetic white-blood images of 0.44% with limits of agreement from -10.85% to 11.74%. The mean image quality of the real WB images (3.53/5) was scored higher than the synthetic white-blood images (3.03), P = 0.009. CONCLUSIONS: This study proposed a CycleGAN model to generate synthetic WB-LGE from DB-LGE images to allow assessment of both image contrasts without additional scan time. This work represents a clinically focused assessment of synthetic medical images generated by artificial intelligence, a topic with significant potential for a multitude of applications. However, further evaluation is warranted before clinical adoption.

3.
MAGMA ; 2024 Apr 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38613715

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Use a conference challenge format to compare machine learning-based gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-edited magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) reconstruction models using one-quarter of the transients typically acquired during a complete scan. METHODS: There were three tracks: Track 1: simulated data, Track 2: identical acquisition parameters with in vivo data, and Track 3: different acquisition parameters with in vivo data. The mean squared error, signal-to-noise ratio, linewidth, and a proposed shape score metric were used to quantify model performance. Challenge organizers provided open access to a baseline model, simulated noise-free data, guides for adding synthetic noise, and in vivo data. RESULTS: Three submissions were compared. A covariance matrix convolutional neural network model was most successful for Track 1. A vision transformer model operating on a spectrogram data representation was most successful for Tracks 2 and 3. Deep learning (DL) reconstructions with 80 transients achieved equivalent or better SNR, linewidth and fit error compared to conventional 320 transient reconstructions. However, some DL models optimized linewidth and SNR without actually improving overall spectral quality, indicating a need for more robust metrics. CONCLUSION: DL-based reconstruction pipelines have the promise to reduce the number of transients required for GABA-edited MRS.

4.
Comput Methods Programs Biomed ; 248: 108115, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38503072

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: As large sets of annotated MRI data are needed for training and validating deep learning based medical image analysis algorithms, the lack of sufficient annotated data is a critical problem. A possible solution is the generation of artificial data by means of physics-based simulations. Existing brain simulation data is limited in terms of anatomical models, tissue classes, fixed tissue characteristics, MR sequences and overall realism. METHODS: We propose a realistic simulation framework by incorporating patient-specific phantoms and Bloch equations-based analytical solutions for fast and accurate MRI simulations. A large number of labels are derived from open-source high-resolution T1w MRI data using a fully automated brain classification tool. The brain labels are taken as ground truth (GT) on which MR images are simulated using our framework. Moreover, we demonstrate that the T1w MR images generated from our framework along with GT annotations can be utilized directly to train a 3D brain segmentation network. To evaluate our model further on larger set of real multi-source MRI data without GT, we compared our model to existing brain segmentation tools, FSL-FAST and SynthSeg. RESULTS: Our framework generates 3D brain MRI for variable anatomy, sequence, contrast, SNR and resolution. The brain segmentation network for WM/GM/CSF trained only on T1w simulated data shows promising results on real MRI data from MRBrainS18 challenge dataset with a Dice scores of 0.818/0.832/0.828. On OASIS data, our model exhibits a close performance to FSL, both qualitatively and quantitatively with a Dice scores of 0.901/0.939/0.937. CONCLUSIONS: Our proposed simulation framework is the initial step towards achieving truly physics-based MRI image generation, providing flexibility to generate large sets of variable MRI data for desired anatomy, sequence, contrast, SNR, and resolution. Furthermore, the generated images can effectively train 3D brain segmentation networks, mitigating the reliance on real 3D annotated data.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Humans , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/anatomy & histology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Algorithms , Neuroimaging/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
5.
Comput Med Imaging Graph ; 112: 102332, 2024 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38245925

ABSTRACT

Accurate brain tumor segmentation is critical for diagnosis and treatment planning, whereby multi-modal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is typically used for analysis. However, obtaining all required sequences and expertly labeled data for training is challenging and can result in decreased quality of segmentation models developed through automated algorithms. In this work, we examine the possibility of employing a conditional generative adversarial network (GAN) approach for synthesizing multi-modal images to train deep learning-based neural networks aimed at high-grade glioma (HGG) segmentation. The proposed GAN is conditioned on auxiliary brain tissue and tumor segmentation masks, allowing us to attain better accuracy and control of tissue appearance during synthesis. To reduce the domain shift between synthetic and real MR images, we additionally adapt the low-frequency Fourier space components of synthetic data, reflecting the style of the image, to those of real data. We demonstrate the impact of Fourier domain adaptation (FDA) on the training of 3D segmentation networks and attain significant improvements in both the segmentation performance and prediction confidence. Similar outcomes are seen when such data is used as a training augmentation alongside the available real images. In fact, experiments on the BraTS2020 dataset reveal that models trained solely with synthetic data exhibit an improvement of up to 4% in Dice score when using FDA, while training with both real and FDA-processed synthetic data through augmentation results in an improvement of up to 5% in Dice compared to using real data alone. This study highlights the importance of considering image frequency in generative approaches for medical image synthesis and offers a promising approach to address data scarcity in medical imaging segmentation.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms , Glioma , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Neural Networks, Computer , Brain Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Algorithms , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods
6.
Eur Heart J Imaging Methods Pract ; 2(1): qyae001, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38283662

ABSTRACT

Aims: Quantitative stress perfusion cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is becoming more widely available, but it is still unclear how to integrate this information into clinical decision-making. Typically, pixel-wise perfusion maps are generated, but diagnostic and prognostic studies have summarized perfusion as just one value per patient or in 16 myocardial segments. In this study, the reporting of quantitative perfusion maps is extended from the standard 16 segments to a high-resolution bullseye. Cut-off thresholds are established for the high-resolution bullseye, and the identified perfusion defects are compared with visual assessment. Methods and results: Thirty-four patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease were retrospectively analysed. Visual perfusion defects were contoured on the CMR images and pixel-wise quantitative perfusion maps were generated. Cut-off values were established on the high-resolution bullseye consisting of 1800 points and compared with the per-segment, per-coronary, and per-patient resolution thresholds. Quantitative stress perfusion was significantly lower in visually abnormal pixels, 1.11 (0.75-1.57) vs. 2.35 (1.82-2.9) mL/min/g (Mann-Whitney U test P < 0.001), with an optimal cut-off of 1.72 mL/min/g. This was lower than the segment-wise optimal threshold of 1.92 mL/min/g. The Bland-Altman analysis showed that visual assessment underestimated large perfusion defects compared with the quantification with good agreement for smaller defect burdens. A Dice overlap of 0.68 (0.57-0.78) was found. Conclusion: This study introduces a high-resolution bullseye consisting of 1800 points, rather than 16, per patient for reporting quantitative stress perfusion, which may improve sensitivity. Using this representation, the threshold required to identify areas of reduced perfusion is lower than for segmental analysis.

7.
Magn Reson Med ; 90(4): 1253-1270, 2023 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37402235

ABSTRACT

This literature review presents a comprehensive overview of machine learning (ML) applications in proton MR spectroscopy (MRS). As the use of ML techniques in MRS continues to grow, this review aims to provide the MRS community with a structured overview of the state-of-the-art methods. Specifically, we examine and summarize studies published between 2017 and 2023 from major journals in the MR field. We categorize these studies based on a typical MRS workflow, including data acquisition, processing, analysis, and artificial data generation. Our review reveals that ML in MRS is still in its early stages, with a primary focus on processing and analysis techniques, and less attention given to data acquisition. We also found that many studies use similar model architectures, with little comparison to alternative architectures. Additionally, the generation of artificial data is a crucial topic, with no consistent method for its generation. Furthermore, many studies demonstrate that artificial data suffers from generalization issues when tested on in vivo data. We also conclude that risks related to ML models should be addressed, particularly for clinical applications. Therefore, output uncertainty measures and model biases are critical to investigate. Nonetheless, the rapid development of ML in MRS and the promising results from the reviewed studies justify further research in this field.


Subject(s)
Machine Learning , Protons , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Workflow , Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
8.
Comput Biol Med ; 161: 106973, 2023 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37209615

ABSTRACT

Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) image segmentation is an integral step in the analysis of cardiac function and diagnosis of heart related diseases. While recent deep learning-based approaches in automatic segmentation have shown great promise to alleviate the need for manual segmentation, most of these are not applicable to realistic clinical scenarios. This is largely due to training on mainly homogeneous datasets, without variation in acquisition, which typically occurs in multi-vendor and multi-site settings, as well as pathological data. Such approaches frequently exhibit a degradation in prediction performance, particularly on outlier cases commonly associated with difficult pathologies, artifacts and extensive changes in tissue shape and appearance. In this work, we present a model aimed at segmenting all three cardiac structures in a multi-center, multi-disease and multi-view scenario. We propose a pipeline, addressing different challenges with segmentation of such heterogeneous data, consisting of heart region detection, augmentation through image synthesis and a late-fusion segmentation approach. Extensive experiments and analysis demonstrate the ability of the proposed approach to tackle the presence of outlier cases during both training and testing, allowing for better adaptation to unseen and difficult examples. Overall, we show that the effective reduction of segmentation failures on outlier cases has a positive impact on not only the average segmentation performance, but also on the estimation of clinical parameters, leading to a better consistency in derived metrics.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Heart Diseases , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Heart/diagnostic imaging , Radiography , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
9.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 27(7): 3302-3313, 2023 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37067963

ABSTRACT

In recent years, several deep learning models have been proposed to accurately quantify and diagnose cardiac pathologies. These automated tools heavily rely on the accurate segmentation of cardiac structures in MRI images. However, segmentation of the right ventricle is challenging due to its highly complex shape and ill-defined borders. Hence, there is a need for new methods to handle such structure's geometrical and textural complexities, notably in the presence of pathologies such as Dilated Right Ventricle, Tricuspid Regurgitation, Arrhythmogenesis, Tetralogy of Fallot, and Inter-atrial Communication. The last MICCAI challenge on right ventricle segmentation was held in 2012 and included only 48 cases from a single clinical center. As part of the 12th Workshop on Statistical Atlases and Computational Models of the Heart (STACOM 2021), the M&Ms-2 challenge was organized to promote the interest of the research community around right ventricle segmentation in multi-disease, multi-view, and multi-center cardiac MRI. Three hundred sixty CMR cases, including short-axis and long-axis 4-chamber views, were collected from three Spanish hospitals using nine different scanners from three different vendors, and included a diverse set of right and left ventricle pathologies. The solutions provided by the participants show that nnU-Net achieved the best results overall. However, multi-view approaches were able to capture additional information, highlighting the need to integrate multiple cardiac diseases, views, scanners, and acquisition protocols to produce reliable automatic cardiac segmentation algorithms.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Heart Ventricles , Humans , Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Algorithms , Heart Atria
10.
J Neuroimaging ; 33(3): 404-414, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36710075

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The lack of a robust diagnostic biomarker makes understanding depression from a neurobiological standpoint an important goal, especially in the context of brain imaging. METHODS: In this study, we aim to create novel image-based features for objective diagnosis of depression. Resting-state network time series are used to investigate neurodynamics with the help of wavelet coherence and Granger causality (G-causality). Three new features are introduced: total wavelet coherence, wavelet lead coherence, and wavelet coherence blob analysis. The fourth feature, pair-wise conditional G-causality, is used to establish the causality between resting-state networks. We use the proposed features to classify depression in adult subjects. RESULTS: We obtained an accuracy of 86% in the wavelet lead coherence, 80% in Granger causality, and 86% in wavelet coherence blob analysis. Subjects with depression showed hyperconnectivity between the dorsal attention network and the auditory network as well as between the posterior default mode network and the dorsal attention network. Hypoconnectivity was found between the anterior default mode network and the auditory network as well as the right frontoparietal network and the lateral visual network. An abnormal co-activation pattern was found between cerebellum and the lateral motor network according to the wavelet coherence blob analysis. CONCLUSION: Based on abnormal functional dynamics between brain networks, we were able to identify subjects with depression with high accuracy. The findings of this study contribute to the understanding of the impaired emotional and attention processing associated with depression, as well as decreased motor activity.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping , Depression , Adult , Humans , Depression/diagnostic imaging , Brain Mapping/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Emotions , Nerve Net/diagnostic imaging
11.
Med Image Anal ; 84: 102688, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36493702

ABSTRACT

Deep learning-based segmentation methods provide an effective and automated way for assessing the structure and function of the heart in cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) images. However, despite their state-of-the-art performance on images acquired from the same source (same scanner or scanner vendor) as images used during training, their performance degrades significantly on images coming from different domains. A straightforward approach to tackle this issue consists of acquiring large quantities of multi-site and multi-vendor data, which is practically infeasible. Generative adversarial networks (GANs) for image synthesis present a promising solution for tackling data limitations in medical imaging and addressing the generalization capability of segmentation models. In this work, we explore the usability of synthesized short-axis CMR images generated using a segmentation-informed conditional GAN, to improve the robustness of heart cavity segmentation models in a variety of different settings. The GAN is trained on paired real images and corresponding segmentation maps belonging to both the heart and the surrounding tissue, reinforcing the synthesis of semantically-consistent and realistic images. First, we evaluate the segmentation performance of a model trained solely with synthetic data and show that it only slightly underperforms compared to the baseline trained with real data. By further combining real with synthetic data during training, we observe a substantial improvement in segmentation performance (up to 4% and 40% in terms of Dice score and Hausdorff distance) across multiple data-sets collected from various sites and scanner. This is additionally demonstrated across state-of-the-art 2D and 3D segmentation networks, whereby the obtained results demonstrate the potential of the proposed method in tackling the presence of the domain shift in medical data. Finally, we thoroughly analyze the quality of synthetic data and its ability to replace real MR images during training, as well as provide an insight into important aspects of utilizing synthetic images for segmentation.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Heart/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
12.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 42(3): 726-738, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36260571

ABSTRACT

One of the limiting factors for the development and adoption of novel deep-learning (DL) based medical image analysis methods is the scarcity of labeled medical images. Medical image simulation and synthesis can provide solutions by generating ample training data with corresponding ground truth labels. Despite recent advances, generated images demonstrate limited realism and diversity. In this work, we develop a flexible framework for simulating cardiac magnetic resonance (MR) images with variable anatomical and imaging characteristics for the purpose of creating a diversified virtual population. We advance previous works on both cardiac MR image simulation and anatomical modeling to increase the realism in terms of both image appearance and underlying anatomy. To diversify the generated images, we define parameters: 1)to alter the anatomy, 2) to assign MR tissue properties to various tissue types, and 3) to manipulate the image contrast via acquisition parameters. The proposed framework is optimized to generate a substantial number of cardiac MR images with ground truth labels suitable for downstream supervised tasks. A database of virtual subjects is simulated and its usefulness for aiding a DL segmentation method is evaluated. Our experiments show that training completely with simulated images can perform comparable with a model trained with real images for heart cavity segmentation in mid-ventricular slices. Moreover, such data can be used in addition to classical augmentation for boosting the performance when training data is limited, particularly by increasing the contrast and anatomical variation, leading to better regularization and generalization. The database is publicly available at https://osf.io/bkzhm/ and the simulation code will be available at https://github.com/sinaamirrajab/CMRI.


Subject(s)
Heart , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Humans , Heart/diagnostic imaging , Computer Simulation
13.
Magn Reson Med ; 89(3): 977-989, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36346081

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To develop a free-breathing (FB) 2D radial balanced steady-state free precession cine cardiac MRI method with 100% respiratory gating efficiency using respiratory auto-calibrated motion correction (RAMCO) based on a motion-sensing camera. METHODS: The signal from a respiratory motion-sensing camera was recorded during a FB retrospectively electrocardiogram triggered 2D radial balanced steady-state free precession acquisition using pseudo-tiny-golden-angle ordering. With RAMCO, for each acquisition the respiratory signal was retrospectively auto-calibrated by applying different linear translations, using the resulting in-plane image sharpness as a criterium. The auto-calibration determines the optimal magnitude of the linear translations for each of the in-plane directions to minimize motion blurring caused by bulk respiratory motion. Additionally, motion-weighted density compensation was applied during radial gridding to minimize through-plane and non-bulk motion blurring. Left ventricular functional parameters and sharpness scores of FB radial cine were compared with and without RAMCO, and additionally with conventional breath-hold Cartesian cine on 9 volunteers. RESULTS: FB radial cine with RAMCO had similar sharpness scores as conventional breath-hold Cartesian cine and the left ventricular functional parameters agreed. For FB radial cine, RAMCO reduced respiratory motion artifacts with a statistically significant difference in sharpness scores (P < 0.05) compared to reconstructions without motion correction. CONCLUSION: 2D radial cine imaging with RAMCO allows evaluation of left ventricular functional parameters in FB with 100% respiratory efficiency. It eliminates the need for breath-holds, which is especially valuable for patients with no or impaired breath-holding capacity. Validation of the proposed method on patients is warranted.


Subject(s)
Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine , Ventricular Function, Left , Humans , Breath Holding , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine/methods , Respiration , Retrospective Studies , Ventricular Function, Left/physiology
14.
Comput Med Imaging Graph ; 101: 102123, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36174308

ABSTRACT

Synthesis of a large set of high-quality medical images with variability in anatomical representation and image appearance has the potential to provide solutions for tackling the scarcity of properly annotated data in medical image analysis research. In this paper, we propose a novel framework consisting of image segmentation and synthesis based on mask-conditional GANs for generating high-fidelity and diverse Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) images. The framework consists of two modules: i) a segmentation module trained using a physics-based simulated database of CMR images to provide multi-tissue labels on real CMR images, and ii) a synthesis module trained using pairs of real CMR images and corresponding multi-tissue labels, to translate input segmentation masks to realistic-looking cardiac images. The anatomy of synthesized images is based on labels, whereas the appearance is learned from the training images. We investigate the effects of the number of tissue labels, quantity of training data, and multi-vendor data on the quality of the synthesized images. Furthermore, we evaluate the effectiveness and usability of the synthetic data for a downstream task of training a deep-learning model for cardiac cavity segmentation in the scenarios of data replacement and augmentation. The results of the replacement study indicate that segmentation models trained with only synthetic data can achieve comparable performance to the baseline model trained with real data, indicating that the synthetic data captures the essential characteristics of its real counterpart. Furthermore, we demonstrate that augmenting real with synthetic data during training can significantly improve both the Dice score (maximum increase of 4%) and Hausdorff Distance (maximum reduction of 40%) for cavity segmentation, suggesting a good potential to aid in tackling medical data scarcity.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Databases, Factual , Heart/diagnostic imaging , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
15.
Comput Methods Programs Biomed ; 226: 107116, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36148718

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The clinical utility of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac MRI is limited by the lack of standardization, and time-consuming postprocessing. In this work, we tested the hypothesis that a cascaded deep learning pipeline trained with augmentation by synthetically generated data would improve model accuracy and robustness for automated scar quantification. METHODS: A cascaded pipeline consisting of three consecutive neural networks is proposed, starting with a bounding box regression network to identify a region of interest around the left ventricular (LV) myocardium. Two further nnU-Net models are then used to segment the myocardium and, if present, scar. The models were trained on the data from the EMIDEC challenge, supplemented with an extensive synthetic dataset generated with a conditional GAN. RESULTS: The cascaded pipeline significantly outperformed a single nnU-Net directly segmenting both the myocardium (mean Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) (standard deviation (SD)): 0.84 (0.09) vs 0.63 (0.20), p < 0.01) and scar (DSC: 0.72 (0.34) vs 0.46 (0.39), p < 0.01) on a per-slice level. The inclusion of the synthetic data as data augmentation during training improved the scar segmentation DSC by 0.06 (p < 0.01). The mean DSC per-subject on the challenge test set, for the cascaded pipeline augmented by synthetic generated data, was 0.86 (0.03) and 0.67 (0.29) for myocardium and scar, respectively. CONCLUSION: A cascaded deep learning-based pipeline trained with augmentation by synthetically generated data leads to myocardium and scar segmentations that are similar to the manual operator, and outperforms direct segmentation without the synthetic images.


Subject(s)
Cicatrix , Contrast Media , Humans , Cicatrix/diagnostic imaging , Gadolinium , Neural Networks, Computer , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
16.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 9: 884221, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35571164

ABSTRACT

Introduction: To develop and test the feasibility of free-breathing (FB), high-resolution quantitative first-pass perfusion cardiac MR (FPP-CMR) using dual-echo Dixon (FOSTERS; Fat-water separation for mOtion-corrected Spatio-TEmporally accelerated myocardial peRfuSion). Materials and Methods: FOSTERS was performed in FB using a dual-saturation single-bolus acquisition with dual-echo Dixon and a dynamically variable Cartesian k-t undersampling (8-fold) approach, with low-rank and sparsity constrained reconstruction, to achieve high-resolution FPP-CMR images. FOSTERS also included automatic in-plane motion estimation and T 2 * correction to obtain quantitative myocardial blood flow (MBF) maps. High-resolution (1.6 x 1.6 mm2) FB FOSTERS was evaluated in eleven patients, during rest, against standard-resolution (2.6 x 2.6 mm2) 2-fold SENSE-accelerated breath-hold (BH) FPP-CMR. In addition, MBF was computed for FOSTERS and spatial wavelet-based compressed sensing (CS) reconstruction. Two cardiologists scored the image quality (IQ) of FOSTERS, CS, and standard BH FPP-CMR images using a 4-point scale (1-4, non-diagnostic - fully diagnostic). Results: FOSTERS produced high-quality images without dark-rim and with reduced motion-related artifacts, using an 8x accelerated FB acquisition. FOSTERS and standard BH FPP-CMR exhibited excellent IQ with an average score of 3.5 ± 0.6 and 3.4 ± 0.6 (no statistical difference, p > 0.05), respectively. CS images exhibited severe artifacts and high levels of noise, resulting in an average IQ score of 2.9 ± 0.5. MBF values obtained with FOSTERS presented a lower variance than those obtained with CS. Discussion: FOSTERS enabled high-resolution FB FPP-CMR with MBF quantification. Combining motion correction with a low-rank and sparsity-constrained reconstruction results in excellent image quality.

17.
J Neuroimaging ; 32(4): 582-595, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35598083

ABSTRACT

Objective diagnosis and prognosis in major depressive disorder (MDD) remains a challenge due to the absence of biomarkers based on physiological parameters or medical tests. Numerous studies have been conducted to identify functional magnetic resonance imaging-based biomarkers of depression that either objectively differentiate patients with depression from healthy subjects, predict personalized treatment outcome, or characterize biological subtypes of depression. While there are some findings of consistent functional biomarkers, there is still lack of robust data acquisition and analysis methodology. According to current findings, primarily, the anterior cingulate cortex, prefrontal cortex, and default mode network play a crucial role in MDD. Yet, there are also less consistent results and the involvement of other regions or networks remains ambiguous. We further discuss image acquisition, processing, and analysis limitations that might underlie these inconsistencies. Finally, the current review aims to address and discuss possible remedies and future opportunities that could improve the search for consistent functional imaging biomarkers of depression. Novel acquisition techniques, such as multiband and multiecho imaging, and neural network-based cleaning approaches can enhance the signal quality in limbic and frontal regions. More comprehensive analyses, such as directed or dynamic functional features or the identification of biological depression subtypes, can improve objective diagnosis or treatment outcome prediction and mitigate the heterogeneity of MDD. Overall, these improvements in functional MRI imaging techniques, processing, and analysis could advance the search for biomarkers and ultimately aid patients with MDD and their treatment course.


Subject(s)
Depressive Disorder, Major , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain Mapping , Depressive Disorder, Major/diagnostic imaging , Gyrus Cinguli , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Neural Pathways , Prefrontal Cortex
18.
Sci Data ; 9(1): 97, 2022 03 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35322028

ABSTRACT

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is widely utilized for diagnosing and monitoring of spinal disorders. For a number of applications, particularly those related to quantitative MRI, an essential step towards achieving reliable and objective measurements is the segmentation of the examined structures. Performed manually, such process is time-consuming and prone to errors, posing a bottleneck to its clinical applicability. A more efficient analysis would be achieved by automating a segmentation process. However, routine spine MRI acquisitions pose several challenges for achieving robust and accurate segmentations, due to varying MRI acquisition characteristics occurring in data acquired from different sites. Moreover, heterogeneous annotated datasets, collected from multiple scanners with different pulse sequence protocols, are limited. Thus, we present a manually segmented lumbar spine MRI database containing a wide range of data obtained from multiple scanners and pulse sequences, with segmentations of lumbar vertebral bodies and intervertebral discs. The database is intended for the use in developing and testing of automated lumbar spine segmentation algorithms in multi-domain scenarios.


Subject(s)
Intervertebral Disc , Vertebral Body , Databases, Factual , Intervertebral Disc/diagnostic imaging , Intervertebral Disc/pathology , Lumbar Vertebrae/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods
19.
Med Image Anal ; 78: 102399, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35299005

ABSTRACT

Tracer-kinetic models allow for the quantification of kinetic parameters such as blood flow from dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance (MR) images. Fitting the observed data with multi-compartment exchange models is desirable, as they are physiologically plausible and resolve directly for blood flow and microvascular function. However, the reliability of model fitting is limited by the low signal-to-noise ratio, temporal resolution, and acquisition length. This may result in inaccurate parameter estimates. This study introduces physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) as a means to perform myocardial perfusion MR quantification, which provides a versatile scheme for the inference of kinetic parameters. These neural networks can be trained to fit the observed perfusion MR data while respecting the underlying physical conservation laws described by a multi-compartment exchange model. Here, we provide a framework for the implementation of PINNs in myocardial perfusion MR. The approach is validated both in silico and in vivo. In the in silico study, an overall decrease in mean-squared error with the ground-truth parameters was observed compared to a standard non-linear least squares fitting approach. The in vivo study demonstrates that the method produces parameter values comparable to those previously found in literature, as well as providing parameter maps which match the clinical diagnosis of patients.


Subject(s)
Contrast Media , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Neural Networks, Computer , Perfusion , Physics , Reproducibility of Results
20.
Data Brief ; 40: 107691, 2022 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34984215

ABSTRACT

The late enhanced magnetic resonance image dataset in this article is simulated using a mechanistic cardiac phantom that includes an myocardial infarct. Settings of the image simulation pipeline are adjusted such that high- and low-resolution images, with and without slice alignment artifacts, are simulated. Our article on the influence of image artifacts on image-based models of the cardiac electrophysiology is based on this data (Kruithof et al., 2021). This dataset provides image-analysis researchers a reference to perform validation of their methods using the included high-resolution ground truth image, a resource that is often unavailable clinically.

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