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Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart. FIMH 2005. Lecture Notes in Computer Science
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  • Alejandro F. Frangi
  • Petia I. Radeva
  • Andres Santos
  • Monica Hernandez
  • Qi Duan
  • Elsa D. Angelini
  • Susan L. Freudzon, Fairfield University
  • Olivier Gerard
  • Pascal Allain
  • Christopher M. Ingrassia
  • Kevin D. Costa
  • Jeffrey W. Holmes
  • Shunichi Homma
  • Andrew F. Laine
Role

Editors: Alejandro F. Frangi, Petia I. Radeva, Andres Santos, Monica Hernandez

Contributing authors: Authors: Qi Duan, Elsa D. Angelini, Susan L. Freudzon (as Susan L. Herz), Olivier Gerard, Pascal Allain, Christopher M. Ingrassia, Kevin D. Costa, Jeffrey W. Holmes, Shunichi Homma, and Andrew F. Laine.

Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Description/Summary

Susan L. Freudzon (as Susan L. Herz, with Qi Duan, Elsa D. Angelini, Olivier Gerard, Pascal Allain, Christopher M. Ingrassia, Kevin D. Costa, Jeffrey W. Holmes, Shunichi Homma, and Andrew F. Laine) is a contributing author, "Tracking of LV Endocardial Surface on Real-Time Three-Dimensional Ultrasound with Optical Flow."

Chapter Abstract:

Matrix-phased array transducers for real-time three-dimensional ultrasound enable fast, non-invasive visualization of cardiac ventricles. Segmentation of 3D ultrasound is typically performed at end diastole and end systole with challenges for automation of the process and propagation of segmentation in time. In this context, given the position of the endocardial surface at certain instants in the cardiac cycle, automated tracking of the surface over the remaining time frames could reduce the workload of cardiologists and optimize analysis of volume ultrasound data. In this paper, we applied optical flow to track the endocardial surface between frames of reference, segmented via manual tracing or manual editing of the output from a deformable model. To evaluate optical-flow tracking of the endocardium, quantitative comparison of ventricular geometry and dynamic cardiac function are reported on two open-chest dog data sets and a clinical data set. Results showed excellent agreement between optical flow tracking and segmented surfaces at reference frames, suggesting that optical flow can provide dynamic “interpolation” of a segmented endocardial surface.

Keywords: Root Mean Square Error, Optical Flow, Deformable Model, Endocardial Surface, Ventricular Geometry

Disciplines
ISBN
9783540261612
Publication Date
1-1-2005
Publication Information

Duan, Q., E.D. Angelini, S.L. Herz, O. Gerard, P. Allain, C.M. Ingrassia, K.D. Costa, J.W. Holmes, S. Homma, A.F. Laine. (2005) Tracking of LV Endocardial Surface on Real-Time Three-Dimensional Ultrasound with Optical Flow. In: Frangi A.F., Radeva P.I., Santos A., Hernandez M. (eds) Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart. FIMH 2005. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 3504. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/11494621_43.

Comments

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005 https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/11494621_43

Citation Information
Alejandro F. Frangi, Petia I. Radeva, Andres Santos, Monica Hernandez, et al.. "Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart. FIMH 2005. Lecture Notes in Computer Science" (2005)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/susan-freudzon/1/