Difference between revisions of "Projects:DTI DWI QualityControl"
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[[Image:Correction.png|700px|thumb|center| The correction results show visible improvement in contrast within the cingulum and fornix tracts (left) and fiber tractography of splenium (right). ]] | [[Image:Correction.png|700px|thumb|center| The correction results show visible improvement in contrast within the cingulum and fornix tracts (left) and fiber tractography of splenium (right). ]] | ||
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+ | == Ongoing Research about Simulation-based Bias Analysis== | ||
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+ | It is important to note that there are some pitfalls associated with these QC approaches in the result of QC after correcting these artifacts. The correction processes modify a configuration of gradient sampling from a scan either by changing the gradients directions or excluding individual DWI’s along a subset of the gradients due to artifacts. Conventionally, QC procedures exclude artifact-affected DWIs from subsequent computations leading to a cleaned, reduced set of DWIs, called DWI-QC. Often, a rejection threshold is heuristically/empirically chosen above which the entire DWI-QC data is rendered unacceptable and thus no DTI is computed. In this work, we propose a simulation-based automatic DTI QC to assess the resulting tensor properties from DWI-QC techniques. We define two error metrics based on the directional distribution of bias for FA and PD. These metrics can provide a promising benchmark for post-QC assessment of the remaining DWIs. | ||
= Publications = | = Publications = |
Revision as of 18:07, 2 January 2013
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Diffusion Tensor and Diffusion Weighted Imaging Quality Control
As theoretical work characterizing DTI grows, it is essential to increase its practical usability from a clinical environment perspective. Inherently, DWI images suffer from a vast variety of artifacts and the acquisition time for diffusion MRI is longer than conventional MRI due to the need for multiple acquisitions to obtain directionally encoded Diffusion Weighted Images (DWI). This leads to increased motion artifacts and reduced signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Therefore, in a clinical environment, this imaging technique needs additional processes such as appropriate QC assessment methods to increase its practical usability. We are developing a framework, called DTIPrep, for assessing and correcting DWIs and DTI.
Description
Current framework for DWI QC
DTIPrep is the first comprehensive and fully automatic pre-processing tool for DWI and DTI quality control can provide a crucial piece for robust DTI analysis studies. The protocoling, reporting, visual controlling and data correction capabilities are used to produce high consistence and inter-rater reliable QC results. This framework is organized by pipeline steps include: 1) Dicom to NRRD converting, 2) image info checking, 3) diffusion information checking, 4) rician LMMSE noise filter, 5) slice-wise intensity checking, 6) interlace-wise intensity checking, 7) Averaging baseline images, 8) Eddy current and motion correction, 9) gradient-wise checking of residual motion/deformations, 10) joint rician LMMSE noise filter, 11) brain masking, 12) DTI computing, 13) dominant direction artifact (vibration artifact) checking, 14) optional visual checking and 15) simulation-based bias analysis.
Entropy Based Diffusion Imaging Quality Control
We have proposed new QC step for detecting drop-out signal intensities which can be caused by mechanical vibration artifacts. This step detects and potentially removes these residual artifacts that are not commonly detected in the individual DWIs. The artifacts appear in color-FA images in either widespread or local dominant direction ( see Fig?? ). In order to detect such artifacts, we proposed a new approach via the entropy of the Principal Direction (PD) histogram computed over the major region of the image (e.g. the full brain). Given a prior knowledge of expected entropy values for acceptable scans, the quality of the DTI image is categorized into acceptable, suspicious and highly suspicious/rejection categories using calculated the standard scores.
For our correction step, we employed a simple, iterative leave-one-out-strategy over all individual DWI images by recomputing DTI images and correspond- ing entropies. At each iteration, the DWI with maximal improvement is removed and all leave-one-out entropies are recomputed. This process is continued until either the z-score is in acceptable range or a maximum threshold for exclusion is reached.
Ongoing Research about Simulation-based Bias Analysis
It is important to note that there are some pitfalls associated with these QC approaches in the result of QC after correcting these artifacts. The correction processes modify a configuration of gradient sampling from a scan either by changing the gradients directions or excluding individual DWI’s along a subset of the gradients due to artifacts. Conventionally, QC procedures exclude artifact-affected DWIs from subsequent computations leading to a cleaned, reduced set of DWIs, called DWI-QC. Often, a rejection threshold is heuristically/empirically chosen above which the entire DWI-QC data is rendered unacceptable and thus no DTI is computed. In this work, we propose a simulation-based automatic DTI QC to assess the resulting tensor properties from DWI-QC techniques. We define two error metrics based on the directional distribution of bias for FA and PD. These metrics can provide a promising benchmark for post-QC assessment of the remaining DWIs.
Publications
Key Investigators
- UNC Algorithms: Mahshid Farzinfar, Zhexing Liu, Martin Styner, Clement Vachet
- Utah Algorithms: Tom Fletcher, Ross Whitaker, Guido Gerig, Sylvain Gouttard
Links
- DTIPrep on NITRC