Difference between revisions of "Project Week 25/Wrist Kinematics:"

From NAMIC Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Added objective)
 
(29 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__
 
 
Back to [[Project_Week_25#Projects|Projects List]]
 
Back to [[Project_Week_25#Projects|Projects List]]
 
  
 
==Key Investigators==
 
==Key Investigators==
 
<!-- Key Investigator bullet points -->
 
<!-- Key Investigator bullet points -->
*James Fishbaugh (NYU Tandon School of Engineering)
+
*[http://engineering.nyu.edu/people/james-fishbaugh James Fishbaugh] (NYU Tandon School of Engineering, USA)
*Guido Gerig (NYU Tandon School of Engineering)
+
*[http://engineering.nyu.edu/people/guido-gerig Guido Gerig] (NYU Tandon School of Engineering, USA)
 
 
  
 
==Project Description==
 
==Project Description==
Line 17: Line 14:
 
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
 
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
 
|<!-- Objective bullet points -->
 
|<!-- Objective bullet points -->
The goal of this project is to analyze wrist kinematics from a dynamic MRI sequence. Challenges include segmentation of wrist bones from relatively low resolution MRI with anisotropic voxels, and joint spatiotemporal modeling of extracted bones as a multi-object complex.  
+
* The clinical goal of this project is the use of dynamic MRI (instead of static series of 3D CT done so far) to explore 3D carpal dynamics to detect kinematic wrist abnormalities in diagnosis/staging/management, to study carpal motion in health/disease, and to evaluate results after surgery
 +
* Collaborators:  Catherine N. Petchprapa, MD, NYU Langone Musculoskeletal Imaging & Radiology, and Riccardo Lattanzi, NYU Langone Radiology.
 +
* Challenges for image analysis include segmentation of wrist bones from a longitudinal series of relatively low resolution MRI with anisotropic voxels, consistent segmentation of individual bones across the time series, and joint spatiotemporal modeling of extracted bones as a multi-object complex.  
  
 
|<!-- Approach and Plan bullet points -->
 
|<!-- Approach and Plan bullet points -->
 +
 +
* We will use Slicer and various tools for visualization, segmentation, and analysis of the dynamic MR sequence.
  
 
|<!-- Progress and Next steps (fill out at the end of project week), bullet points -->
 
|<!-- Progress and Next steps (fill out at the end of project week), bullet points -->
 +
 +
* Slicer was used to import the DICOM sequence and export 10 individual volumes. The sequences module combined with volume rendering within Slicer provided exploratory qualatative analysis of the wrist kinematics.
 +
 +
* The 10 images in the sequence were used to estimate a template image with [http://stnava.github.io/ANTs/ ANTs].
 +
 +
* 3D segmentation of individual bones was solved via level-set segmentation within [http://www.itksnap.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php itkSNAP]. Preliminary tests with Slicer GrowCut were not satisfactory due to highly non-isotropic voxels, but more tests will be necessary to explore new advanced features within "Segment Editor".
 +
 +
* Spatiotemporal modeling was performed jointly with all bones using [https://github.com/jamesfishbaugh/shape4D shape4d].
  
 
|}
 
|}
Line 27: Line 36:
 
==Illustrations==
 
==Illustrations==
  
https://na-mic.org/w/images/c/c8/Wrist_multivolume.gif
+
Left) One observation of the wrist. Right) A sequence of volume renderings within Slicer to show the 10 observations.
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
| [[File:Wrist_multivolume.gif | 550px]] || [[File:Wrist_volume_rendering_small.gif]]
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
Segmentation of the wrist bones in the template space, which are propagated back to the individual observations via mappings computed during template estimation.
 +
 
 +
[[File:Wrist_template_seg.png]]
 +
 
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
Continous change trajectories via spatiotemporal modeling. Color denotes speed and vectors denote direction of change.
 +
 
 +
http://research.engineering.nyu.edu/~fishbaugh/docs/wrist_quick.gif http://research.engineering.nyu.edu/~fishbaugh/docs/wrist_velocity_vectors.gif
  
 
==Background and References==
 
==Background and References==
 +
[1] Fishbaugh, J., Durrleman, S., Prastawa, M., Gerig, G. Geodesic shape regression with multiple geometries and sparse parameters. Medical Image Analysis. Vol 39. pp. 1-17. (2017)
 +
 +
[2] Fishbaugh, J., Durrleman, S., Gerig, G. Estimation of smooth growth trajectories with controlled acceleration from time series shape data. Proc. of Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention (MICCAI '11). Vol 6892, pp. 401-408. (2011)
 +
 
<!-- Use this space for information that may help people better understand your project, like links to papers, source code, or data -->
 
<!-- Use this space for information that may help people better understand your project, like links to papers, source code, or data -->

Latest revision as of 10:08, 30 June 2017

Home < Project Week 25 < Wrist Kinematics:

Back to Projects List

Key Investigators

Project Description

Objective Approach and Plan Progress and Next Steps
  • The clinical goal of this project is the use of dynamic MRI (instead of static series of 3D CT done so far) to explore 3D carpal dynamics to detect kinematic wrist abnormalities in diagnosis/staging/management, to study carpal motion in health/disease, and to evaluate results after surgery
  • Collaborators: Catherine N. Petchprapa, MD, NYU Langone Musculoskeletal Imaging & Radiology, and Riccardo Lattanzi, NYU Langone Radiology.
  • Challenges for image analysis include segmentation of wrist bones from a longitudinal series of relatively low resolution MRI with anisotropic voxels, consistent segmentation of individual bones across the time series, and joint spatiotemporal modeling of extracted bones as a multi-object complex.
  • We will use Slicer and various tools for visualization, segmentation, and analysis of the dynamic MR sequence.
  • Slicer was used to import the DICOM sequence and export 10 individual volumes. The sequences module combined with volume rendering within Slicer provided exploratory qualatative analysis of the wrist kinematics.
  • The 10 images in the sequence were used to estimate a template image with ANTs.
  • 3D segmentation of individual bones was solved via level-set segmentation within itkSNAP. Preliminary tests with Slicer GrowCut were not satisfactory due to highly non-isotropic voxels, but more tests will be necessary to explore new advanced features within "Segment Editor".
  • Spatiotemporal modeling was performed jointly with all bones using shape4d.

Illustrations

Left) One observation of the wrist. Right) A sequence of volume renderings within Slicer to show the 10 observations.

Wrist multivolume.gif Wrist volume rendering small.gif


Segmentation of the wrist bones in the template space, which are propagated back to the individual observations via mappings computed during template estimation.

Wrist template seg.png


Continous change trajectories via spatiotemporal modeling. Color denotes speed and vectors denote direction of change.

wrist_quick.gif wrist_velocity_vectors.gif

Background and References

[1] Fishbaugh, J., Durrleman, S., Prastawa, M., Gerig, G. Geodesic shape regression with multiple geometries and sparse parameters. Medical Image Analysis. Vol 39. pp. 1-17. (2017)

[2] Fishbaugh, J., Durrleman, S., Gerig, G. Estimation of smooth growth trajectories with controlled acceleration from time series shape data. Proc. of Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention (MICCAI '11). Vol 6892, pp. 401-408. (2011)