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1.
Nucl Med Commun ; 44(10): 834-842, 2023 Oct 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37464866

RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIVES: With disease-modifying therapies in development for neurological disorders, quantitative brain imaging techniques become increasingly relevant for objective early diagnosis and assessment of response to treatment. The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of Brain SPECT and PET scans in the UK and explore drivers and barriers to using quantitative analysis through an online survey. METHODS: A web-based survey with 27 questions was used to capture a snapshot of brain imaging in the UK. The survey included multiple-choice questions assessing the availability and use of quantification for DaTscan, Perfusion SPECT, FDG PET and Amyloid PET. The survey results were reviewed and interpreted by a panel of imaging experts. RESULTS: Forty-six unique responses were collected and analysed, with 84% of responses from brain imaging sites. Within these sites, 88% perform DaTscan, 50% Perfusion SPECT, 48% FDG PET, and 33% Amyloid PET, while a few sites use other PET tracers. Quantitative Brain analysis is used in 86% of sites performing DaTscans, 40% for Perfusion SPECT, 63% for FDG PET and 42% for Amyloid PET. Commercial tools are used more frequently than in-house software. CONCLUSION: The survey showed variations across the UK, with high availability of DaTscan imaging and quantification and lower availability of other SPECT and PET scans. The main drivers for quantification were improved reporting confidence and diagnostic accuracy, while the main barriers were a perception of a need for an appropriate database of healthy controls and a lack of training, time, and software availability.


Sujet(s)
Fluorodésoxyglucose F18 , Tomographie par émission monophotonique , Tomographie par émission monophotonique/méthodes , Tomographie par émission de positons/méthodes , Encéphale/imagerie diagnostique , Amyloïde , Royaume-Uni
2.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 56(9): 2225-31, 2009 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19369148

RÉSUMÉ

Intervertebral disc degeneration is an age-associated condition related to chronic back pain, while its consequences are responsible for over 90 % of spine surgical procedures. In clinical practice, MRI is the modality of reference for diagnosing disc degeneration. In this study, we worked toward 2-D semiautomatic segmentation of both normal and degenerated lumbar intervertebral discs from T2-weighted midsagittal MR images of the spine. This task is challenged by partial volume effects and overlapping gray-level values between neighboring tissue classes. To overcome these problems three variations of atlas-based segmentation using a probabilistic atlas of the intervertebral disc were developed and their accuracies were quantitatively evaluated against manually segmented data. The best overall performance, when considering the tradeoff between segmentation accuracy and time efficiency, was accomplished by the atlas-robust-fuzzy c-means approach, which combines prior anatomical knowledge by means of a rigidly registered probabilistic disc atlas with fuzzy clustering techniques incorporating smoothness constraints. The dice similarity indexes of this method were 91.6 % for normal and 87.2 % for degenerated discs. Research in progress utilizes the proposed approach as part of a computer-aided diagnosis system for quantification and characterization of disc degeneration severity. Moreover, this approach could be exploited in computer-assisted spine surgery.


Sujet(s)
Traitement d'image par ordinateur/méthodes , Disque intervertébral/anatomopathologie , Vertèbres lombales/anatomie et histologie , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Rachis/anatomie et histologie , Algorithmes , Théorème de Bayes , Analyse de regroupements , Diagnostic assisté par ordinateur , Logique floue , Humains , Courbe ROC , Reproductibilité des résultats
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