WIAS Preprint No. 1317, (2008)

A threestepped coordinated level set segmentation method for identifying atherosclerotic plaques on MR-images



Authors

  • Gloger, Oliver
  • Ehrhardt, Matthias
  • Dietrich, Thore
  • Hellwich, Olaf
  • Graf, Kristof
  • Nagel, Eike

2010 Mathematics Subject Classification

  • 92B05 65M06

Keywords

  • level set segmentation, active contours, medical image segmentation, anisotropic diffusion, atherosclerotic plaques, canny edges

DOI

10.20347/WIAS.PREPRINT.1317

Abstract

In this work we propose an adapted level set segmentation technique for the recognition of atherosclerotic plaque tissue on magnetic resonance images. The images are 2dimensional crosssectional images and show different profiles from ex-vivo human vessels with high variability in vessel shape. We used a curvature based anisotropic diffusion technique to denoise the magnetic resonance images.
The segmentation technique is subdivided into three level set steps. Hence, the result of every phase serves as constructive knowledge for the next level set step. By analyzing and combining carefully all available channel information during the first and second step we are capable to delineate exactly the vessel walls by using and adapting two well-known level set segmentation techniques.
The third step controls an enclosing level set which separates the plaque patterns from healthy media tissue. In this step we introduce a local weighting concept to consider intensity information for conspicuous plaque patterns. Furthermore, we propose the introduction of a maximal shrinking distance for the third level set in the vessel wall and compare the results of the local weighting algorithm with and without the concept of the maximal shrinking distance.
The incorporation of locally weighted intensity information into the level set method allows the algorithm to automatically distinguish plaque from healthy media tissue. The knowledge of the maximal shrinking distance can improve the segmentation results and enables to delineate tissue areas where plaque is most likely.

Appeared in

  • Comm. Numer. Methods Engrg., 25 (2009) pp. 615--638.

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