Phenomenological Model of Diffuse Global and Regional Atrophy Using Finite-Element Methods
- 30 October 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
- Vol. 25 (11) , 1417-1430
- https://doi.org/10.1109/tmi.2006.880588
Abstract
The main goal of this work is the generation of ground-truth data for the validation of atrophy measurement techniques, commonly used in the study of neurodegenerative diseases such as dementia. Several techniques have been used to measure atrophy in cross-sectional and longitudinal studies, but it is extremely difficult to compare their performance since they have been applied to different patient populations. Furthermore, assessment of performance based on phantom measurements or simple scaled images overestimates these techniques' ability to capture the complexity of neurodegeneration of the human brain. We propose a method for atrophy simulation in structural magnetic resonance (MR) images based on finite-element methods. The method produces cohorts of brain images with known change that is physically and clinically plausible, providing data for objective evaluation of atrophy measurement techniques. Atrophy is simulated in different tissue compartments or in different neuroanatomical structures with a phenomenological model. This model of diffuse global and regional atrophy is based on volumetric measurements such as the brain or the hippocampus, from patients with known disease and guided by clinical knowledge of the relative pathological involvement of regions and tissues. The consequent biomechanical readjustment of structures is modelled using conventional physics-based techniques based on biomechanical tissue properties and simulating plausible tissue deformations with finite-element methods. A thermoelastic model of tissue deformation is employed, controlling the rate of progression of atrophy by means of a set of thermal coefficients, each one corresponding to a different type of tissue. Tissue characterization is performed by means of the meshing of a labelled brain atlas, creating a reference volumetric mesh that will be introduced to a finite-element solver to create the simulated deformations. Preliminary work on the simulation of acquisition artefacts is also presented. Cross-sectional and longitudinal sets of simulated data are shown and a visual classification protocol has been used by experts to rate real and simulated scans according to their degree of atrophy. Results confirm the potential of the proposed methodologyKeywords
This publication has 86 references indexed in Scilit:
- Global prevalence of dementia: a Delphi consensus studyPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- Image reconstruction in optical tomography using local basis functionsJournal of Electronic Imaging, 2003
- Validation of nonrigid image registration using finite-element methods: application to breast MR imagesIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 2003
- Biomechanical 3-D finite element modeling of the human breast using MRI dataIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 2001
- Registration of 3-d intraoperative MR images of the brain using a finite-element biomechanical modelIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 2001
- Voxel-Based Morphometry—The MethodsNeuroImage, 2000
- An overlap invariant entropy measure of 3D medical image alignmentPattern Recognition, 1999
- NETGEN An advancing front 2D/3D-mesh generator based on abstract rulesComputing and Visualization in Science, 1997
- Neuropathological stageing of Alzheimer-related changesActa Neuropathologica, 1991
- Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's diseaseNeurology, 1984