Abstract

A three-dimensional (3-D) representation of cerebral vessel morphology is essential for neuroradiologists treating cerebral aneurysms. However, current imaging techniques cannot provide such a representation. Slices of MR angiography (MRA) data can only give two-dimensional (2-D) descriptions and ambiguities of aneurysm position and size arising in X-ray projection images can often be intractable. To overcome these problems, we have established a new automatic statistically based algorithm for extracting the 3-D vessel information from time-of-flight (TOF) MRA data. We introduce distributions for the data, motivated by a physical model of blood flow, that are used in a modified version of the expectation maximization (EM) algorithm. The estimated model parameters are then used to classify statistically the voxels into vessel or other brain tissue classes. The algorithm is adaptive because the model fitting is performed recursively so that classifications are made on local subvolumes of data. We present results from applying our algorithm to several real data sets that contain both artery and aneurysm structures of various sizes.

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