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Image-based methods for phase estimation, gating and temporal super-resolution of cardiac ultrasound

OBJECTIVE: Ultrasound is an effective tool for rapid non-invasive assessment of cardiac structure and function. Determining the cardiorespiratory phases of each frame in the ultrasound video and capturing the cardiac function at a much higher temporal resolution is essential in many applications. Fu...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chittajallu, Deepak Roy, McCormick, Matthew, Gerber, Samuel, Czernuszewicz, Tomasz J., Gessner, Ryan, Willis, Monte S., Niethammer, Marc, Kwitt, Roland, Aylward, Stephen R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6340645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29993406
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TBME.2018.2823279
Descripción
Sumario:OBJECTIVE: Ultrasound is an effective tool for rapid non-invasive assessment of cardiac structure and function. Determining the cardiorespiratory phases of each frame in the ultrasound video and capturing the cardiac function at a much higher temporal resolution is essential in many applications. Fulfilling these requirements is particularly challenging in preclinical studies involving small animals with high cardiorespiratory rates, requiring cumbersome and expensive specialized hardware. METHODS: We present a novel method for the retrospective estimation of cardiorespiratory phases directly from the ultrasound videos. It transforms the videos into a univariate time-series preserving the evidence of periodic cardiorespiratory motion, decouples the signatures of cardiorespiratory motion with a trend extraction technique, and estimates the cardiorespiratory phases using a Hilbert transform approach. We also present a robust nonparametric regression technique for respiratory gating and a novel kernel-regression model for reconstructing images at any cardiac phase facilitating temporal super-resolution. RESULTS: We validated our methods using 2D echocardiography videos and electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings of 6 mice. Our cardiac phase estimation method provides accurate phase estimates with a mean-phase-error-range of 3–6% against ECG derived phase and outperforms three previously published methods in locating ECGs R-wave peak frames with a mean-frame-error-range of 0.73–1.36. Our kernel-regression model accurately reconstructs images at any cardiac phase with a mean-normalized-correlation-range of 0.81–0.85 over 50 leave-one-out-cross-validation rounds. CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: Our methods can enable tracking of cardiorespiratory phases without additional hardware and reconstruction of respiration-free single cardiac-cycle videos at a much higher temporal resolution.