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Electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using AT layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model

BACKGROUND: In computed tomography colonography images, electronic cleansing (EC) is applied to remove opacified residual materials, called fecal-tagging materials (FTM), using positive-contrast tagging agents and laxative to facilitate polyp detection. METHODS: The proposed EC, EC (prop), integrate...

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Autores principales: Chunhapongpipat, Krisorn, Boonklurb, Ratinan, Chaopathomkul, Bundit, Sirisup, Sirod, Lipikorn, Rajalida
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5584008/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28870147
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12880-017-0224-6
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author Chunhapongpipat, Krisorn
Boonklurb, Ratinan
Chaopathomkul, Bundit
Sirisup, Sirod
Lipikorn, Rajalida
author_facet Chunhapongpipat, Krisorn
Boonklurb, Ratinan
Chaopathomkul, Bundit
Sirisup, Sirod
Lipikorn, Rajalida
author_sort Chunhapongpipat, Krisorn
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In computed tomography colonography images, electronic cleansing (EC) is applied to remove opacified residual materials, called fecal-tagging materials (FTM), using positive-contrast tagging agents and laxative to facilitate polyp detection. METHODS: The proposed EC, EC (prop), integrates the gradient directional second derivative into material fraction model to preserve submerged soft tissue (ST) under FTM. Three-material fraction model is used to remove FTM and artifacts at air-tagging (AT) layers and T-junctions where air, ST, and FTM material meet simultaneously. Moreover, the proposed AT layer identification is used to distinguish AT layers from air-tissue-tagging (ATT) layers in order to preserve ATT layers during cleansing. The clinical evaluation on 467 3-Dimensional band view images was conducted by the abdominal radiologist using four grading levels of cleansing quality with five causes of low quality EC. The amount of the remaining artifacts at T-junctions was approximated from the results of EC (prop). The results from EC (prop) were compared with the results from syngo.via Client 3.0 Software, EC (syngo), and the fast three-material modeling, EC (prev), using the preference of the radiologist. Two-tailed paired Wilcoxon signed rank test is used to indicate statistical significance. RESULTS: The average grade on cleansing quality is 2.89 out of 4. The artifacts at T-junctions from 86.94% of the test images can be removed, whereas artifacts at T-junctions from only 13.06% of the test images cannot be removed. For 13.06% of the test images, the results from EC (prop) are more preferable to the results from EC (syngo) (p<0.008). For all the test images, the results from EC (prop) are more preferable to the results from EC (prev) (p<0.001). Finally, the visual assessment shows that EC (prop) can preserve ATT layers, submerged polyps and folds while EC (prev) can preserve only submerged folds but fails to preserve ATT layers. CONCLUSION: From our implementation, EC (prop) can improve the performance of the existing EC, such that it can preserve ST, especially ATT layers and remove the artifacts at T-junctions which have never been proposed by any other methods before.
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spelling pubmed-55840082017-09-06 Electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using AT layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model Chunhapongpipat, Krisorn Boonklurb, Ratinan Chaopathomkul, Bundit Sirisup, Sirod Lipikorn, Rajalida BMC Med Imaging Research Article BACKGROUND: In computed tomography colonography images, electronic cleansing (EC) is applied to remove opacified residual materials, called fecal-tagging materials (FTM), using positive-contrast tagging agents and laxative to facilitate polyp detection. METHODS: The proposed EC, EC (prop), integrates the gradient directional second derivative into material fraction model to preserve submerged soft tissue (ST) under FTM. Three-material fraction model is used to remove FTM and artifacts at air-tagging (AT) layers and T-junctions where air, ST, and FTM material meet simultaneously. Moreover, the proposed AT layer identification is used to distinguish AT layers from air-tissue-tagging (ATT) layers in order to preserve ATT layers during cleansing. The clinical evaluation on 467 3-Dimensional band view images was conducted by the abdominal radiologist using four grading levels of cleansing quality with five causes of low quality EC. The amount of the remaining artifacts at T-junctions was approximated from the results of EC (prop). The results from EC (prop) were compared with the results from syngo.via Client 3.0 Software, EC (syngo), and the fast three-material modeling, EC (prev), using the preference of the radiologist. Two-tailed paired Wilcoxon signed rank test is used to indicate statistical significance. RESULTS: The average grade on cleansing quality is 2.89 out of 4. The artifacts at T-junctions from 86.94% of the test images can be removed, whereas artifacts at T-junctions from only 13.06% of the test images cannot be removed. For 13.06% of the test images, the results from EC (prop) are more preferable to the results from EC (syngo) (p<0.008). For all the test images, the results from EC (prop) are more preferable to the results from EC (prev) (p<0.001). Finally, the visual assessment shows that EC (prop) can preserve ATT layers, submerged polyps and folds while EC (prev) can preserve only submerged folds but fails to preserve ATT layers. CONCLUSION: From our implementation, EC (prop) can improve the performance of the existing EC, such that it can preserve ST, especially ATT layers and remove the artifacts at T-junctions which have never been proposed by any other methods before. BioMed Central 2017-09-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5584008/ /pubmed/28870147 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12880-017-0224-6 Text en © The Author(s) 2017 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver(http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chunhapongpipat, Krisorn
Boonklurb, Ratinan
Chaopathomkul, Bundit
Sirisup, Sirod
Lipikorn, Rajalida
Electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using AT layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model
title Electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using AT layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model
title_full Electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using AT layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model
title_fullStr Electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using AT layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model
title_full_unstemmed Electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using AT layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model
title_short Electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using AT layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model
title_sort electronic cleansing in computed tomography colonography using at layer identification with integration of gradient directional second derivative and material fraction model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5584008/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28870147
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12880-017-0224-6
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