Physics-informed motion registration of lung parenchyma across static CT images.
ArXiv
; 2024 Jul 03.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39010873
ABSTRACT
Lung injuries, such as ventilator-induced lung injury and radiation-induced lung injury, can lead to heterogeneous alterations in the biomechanical behavior of the lungs. While imaging methods, e.g., X-ray and static computed tomography (CT), can point to regional alterations in lung structure between healthy and diseased tissue, they fall short of delineating timewise kinematic variations between the former and the latter. Image registration has gained recent interest as a tool to estimate the displacement experienced by the lungs during respiration via regional deformation metrics such as volumetric expansion and distortion. However, successful image registration commonly relies on a temporal series of image stacks with small displacements in the lungs across succeeding image stacks, which remains limited in static imaging. In this study, we have presented a finite element (FE) method to estimate strains from static images acquired at the end-expiration (EE) and end-inspiration (EI) timepoints, i.e., images with a large deformation between the two distant timepoints. Physiologically realistic loads were applied to the geometry obtained at EE to deform this geometry to match the geometry obtained at EI. The results indicated that the simulation could minimize the error between the two geometries. Using four-dimensional (4D) dynamic CT in a rat, the strain at an isolated transverse plane estimated by our method showed sufficient agreement with that estimated through non-rigid image registration that used all the timepoints. Through the proposed method, we can estimate the lung deformation at any timepoint between EE and EI. The proposed method offers a tool to estimate timewise regional deformation in the lungs using only static images acquired at EE and EI.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Language:
En
Journal:
ArXiv
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
United States
Country of publication:
United States