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Main Authors: Mondal, Parmita, Shields, Allison, Bhurwani, Mohammad Mahdi Shiraz, Williams, Kyle A, Ionita, Ciprian N
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.05287
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author Mondal, Parmita
Shields, Allison
Bhurwani, Mohammad Mahdi Shiraz
Williams, Kyle A
Ionita, Ciprian N
author_facet Mondal, Parmita
Shields, Allison
Bhurwani, Mohammad Mahdi Shiraz
Williams, Kyle A
Ionita, Ciprian N
contents In Angiographic Parametric Imaging (API), accurate estimation of parameters from Time Density Curves (TDC) is crucial. However, these estimations are often marred by errors arising from factors such as patient motion, procedural preferences, image noise, and injection variability. While fitting methods like gamma-variate fitting offer a solution to recover incomplete or corrupted TDC data, they might also introduce unforeseen biases. This study investigates the trade-offs and benefits of employing gamma-variate fitting on virtual angiograms to enhance the precision of API biomarkers. Utilizing Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) in patient specific 3D geometries, we generated a series of high-definition virtual angiograms at distinct inlet velocities: 0.25m/s, 0.35m/s, and 0.45m/s. These velocities were investigated across injection durations ranging from 0.5s to 2.0s. From these angiograms, TDCs for aneurysms and their corresponding inlets were constructed. To emulate typical clinical challenges, we introduced noise, simulated patient motion, and generated temporally incomplete data sets. These modified TDCs underwent gamma-variate fitting. We quantified both the original and fitted TDC curves using standard angiography metrics such as Cross-Correlation (Cor), Time to Peak (TTP), Mean Transit Time (MTT), Peak Height (PH), Area Under the Curve (AUC), and Maximum Gradient (Max-Gr) for a comprehensive comparison. TDCs enhanced by gamma-variate fitting exhibited a robust correlation with vascular flow dynamics. Our results affirm that gamma-variate fitting can adeptly restore TDCs from fragmentary sequences, elevating the precision of derived API parameters.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2411_05287
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle In-Silico Analysis of Curve Fitting in Angiographic Parametric Imaging in Intracranial Aneurysms
Mondal, Parmita
Shields, Allison
Bhurwani, Mohammad Mahdi Shiraz
Williams, Kyle A
Ionita, Ciprian N
Medical Physics
In Angiographic Parametric Imaging (API), accurate estimation of parameters from Time Density Curves (TDC) is crucial. However, these estimations are often marred by errors arising from factors such as patient motion, procedural preferences, image noise, and injection variability. While fitting methods like gamma-variate fitting offer a solution to recover incomplete or corrupted TDC data, they might also introduce unforeseen biases. This study investigates the trade-offs and benefits of employing gamma-variate fitting on virtual angiograms to enhance the precision of API biomarkers. Utilizing Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) in patient specific 3D geometries, we generated a series of high-definition virtual angiograms at distinct inlet velocities: 0.25m/s, 0.35m/s, and 0.45m/s. These velocities were investigated across injection durations ranging from 0.5s to 2.0s. From these angiograms, TDCs for aneurysms and their corresponding inlets were constructed. To emulate typical clinical challenges, we introduced noise, simulated patient motion, and generated temporally incomplete data sets. These modified TDCs underwent gamma-variate fitting. We quantified both the original and fitted TDC curves using standard angiography metrics such as Cross-Correlation (Cor), Time to Peak (TTP), Mean Transit Time (MTT), Peak Height (PH), Area Under the Curve (AUC), and Maximum Gradient (Max-Gr) for a comprehensive comparison. TDCs enhanced by gamma-variate fitting exhibited a robust correlation with vascular flow dynamics. Our results affirm that gamma-variate fitting can adeptly restore TDCs from fragmentary sequences, elevating the precision of derived API parameters.
title In-Silico Analysis of Curve Fitting in Angiographic Parametric Imaging in Intracranial Aneurysms
topic Medical Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.05287