Construction of Analysis-Suitable Vascular Models Using Axis-Aligned Polycubes

2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam R. Updegrove ◽  
Shawn C. Shadden ◽  
Nathan M. Wilson

Image-based modeling is an active and growing area of biomedical research that utilizes medical imaging to create patient-specific simulations of physiological function. Under this paradigm, anatomical structures are segmented from a volumetric image, creating a geometric model that serves as a computational domain for physics-based modeling. A common application is the segmentation of cardiovascular structures to numerically model blood flow or tissue mechanics. The segmentation of medical image data typically results in a discrete boundary representation (surface mesh) of the segmented structure. However, it is often desirable to have an analytic representation of the model, which facilitates systematic manipulation. For example, the model then becomes easier to union with a medical device, or the geometry can be virtually altered to test or optimize a surgery. Furthermore, to employ increasingly popular isogeometric analysis (IGA) methods, the parameterization must be analysis suitable. Converting a discrete surface model to an analysis-suitable model remains a challenge, especially for complex branched structures commonly encountered in cardiovascular modeling. To address this challenge, we present a framework to convert discrete surface models of vascular geometries derived from medical image data into analysis-suitable nonuniform rational B-splines (NURBS) representation. This is achieved by decomposing the vascular geometry into a polycube structure that can be used to form a globally valid parameterization. We provide several practical examples and demonstrate the accuracy of the methods by quantifying the fidelity of the parameterization with respect to the input geometry.

Author(s):  
Annika Niemann ◽  
Samuel Voß ◽  
Riikka Tulamo ◽  
Simon Weigand ◽  
Bernhard Preim ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose For the evaluation and rupture risk assessment of intracranial aneurysms, clinical, morphological and hemodynamic parameters are analyzed. The reliability of intracranial hemodynamic simulations strongly depends on the underlying models. Due to the missing information about the intracranial vessel wall, the patient-specific wall thickness is often neglected as well as the specific physiological and pathological properties of the vessel wall. Methods In this work, we present a model for structural simulations with patient-specific wall thickness including different tissue types based on postmortem histologic image data. Images of histologic 2D slices from intracranial aneurysms were manually segmented in nine tissue classes. After virtual inflation, they were combined into 3D models. This approach yields multiple 3D models of the inner and outer wall and different tissue parts as a prerequisite for subsequent simulations. Result We presented a pipeline to generate 3D models of aneurysms with respect to the different tissue textures occurring in the wall. First experiments show that including the variance of the tissue in the structural simulation affect the simulation result. Especially at the interfaces between neighboring tissue classes, the larger influence of stiffer components on the stability equilibrium became obvious. Conclusion The presented approach enables the creation of a geometric model with differentiated wall tissue. This information can be used for different applications, like hemodynamic simulations, to increase the modeling accuracy.


Ideally, secure transmission of medical image data is one of the major challenges in health sector. The National Health Information Network has to protect the data in confidential manner. Storage is also one of the basic concern along with secure transmission. In this paper we propose an algorithm that supports confidentiality, authentication and integrity implementation of the scrambled data before transmitting on the communication medium. Before communication the data is compressed while keeping data encrypted. The research work demonstrate with simulation results. The results shows that the proposed work effectively maintains confidentiality, authentication and integrity. The experimental results evaluated medical image quality like PSNR, MSE, SC, and NAEetc.


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