Difference between revisions of "2009 Summer Project Week Meningioma growth simulation"

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<h3>Objective</h3>
 
<h3>Objective</h3>
Meningiomas are primary brain tumors that grow from the cells of meninges. Such tumors are typically benign, and are not invasive. In this project we will investigate the use of the tumor growth simulation tool, TumorSim, for the purposes of modeling the growth of meningioma. Our primary objective is to tune the parameters of the simulation to have maximally realistic appearance of contrast-enhanced tumor mass, realistic deformation of the surrounding tissue, and to evaluate the capabilities of the tumor simulator in modeling meningiomas of various morphology.
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Meningiomas are primary brain tumors that grow from the cells of meninges. Such tumors are typically benign, and are not invasive. In this project we will investigate the use of the tumor growth simulation tool, [http://www.ucnia.org/softwaredata/5-tumordata/10-simtumordb.html TumorSim], for the purposes of modeling the growth of meningioma. Our primary objective is to tune the parameters of the simulation to have maximally realistic appearance of contrast-enhanced tumor mass, realistic deformation of the surrounding tissue, and to evaluate the capabilities of the tumor simulator in modeling meningiomas of various morphology.
 
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Revision as of 01:06, 3 June 2009

Home < 2009 Summer Project Week Meningioma growth simulation

Key Investigators

  • BWH: Andriy Fedorov, Ron Kikinis
  • Utah: Marcel Prastawa

Objective

Meningiomas are primary brain tumors that grow from the cells of meninges. Such tumors are typically benign, and are not invasive. In this project we will investigate the use of the tumor growth simulation tool, TumorSim, for the purposes of modeling the growth of meningioma. Our primary objective is to tune the parameters of the simulation to have maximally realistic appearance of contrast-enhanced tumor mass, realistic deformation of the surrounding tissue, and to evaluate the capabilities of the tumor simulator in modeling meningiomas of various morphology.

Approach, plan

TumorSim software allows to specify the following simulation parameters:

  • deformation parameters
    • number of iterations
    • initial pressure
    • kappa
  • infiltration parameters
    • number of iterations
    • number of body force iterations
    • time step
    • body force coefficient
  • contrast enhancement type: none, ring or uniform

We will analyze contrast-enhanced MRIs of meningiomas of different sizes, located in different areas of brain, and will attempt to develop a set of recommendations for initializations of the parameters to mimic these tumors.

Progress

References