Abstract

Intravascular optical coherence tomography (OCT) is widely used for analysis of the coronary artery disease. Its high spatial resolution allows for visualization of arterial tissue components in detail. There are different OCT systems on the market, each of which produces data characterized by its own intensity range and distribution. These differences should be taken into account for the development of image processing algorithms. In order to overcome this difference in the intensity range and distribution, we developed a framework for matching intensities based on the exact histogram matching technique. In our method, the key step for using the exact histogram matching is to determine the target histogram. For this, we proposed two schemes: a global scheme that uses a single histogram as the target histogram for all the pullbacks, and a local scheme that selects for each single image a target histogram from a predefined database. These two schemes are compared on a unique dataset containing pairs of pullbacks that were acquired shortly after each other with systems from two vendors, St. Jude and Terumo. Pullbacks were aligned according to anatomical landmarks, and a database of matched histogram pairs was created. A leave-one-out cross validation was used to compare performance of the two schemes. The matching accuracy was evaluated by comparing: (a) histograms using Euclidean (dx2 ) and Kolmogorov-Smirnov (dKS ) distances, and (b) median intensity level within anatomical regions of interest. Leave-one-out validation indicated that both matching schemes yield comparably high accuracies across the entire validation dataset. The local scheme outperforms the global scheme with marginally lower dissimilarities at both histogram level and intensity level. High visual similarity was observed when comparing the matched images to their aligned counterparts. Both local and global schemes are robust and produce accurate intensity matching. While local scheme performs marginally better than the global scheme, it requires a predefined histogram dataset and is more time consuming. Thus, for offline standardization of the images, the local scheme should be preferred for being more accurate. For online standardization or when another system is involved, the global scheme can be used as a simple and nearly-as-accurate alternative.

Highlights

  • Source is around 1300 nm, which permits a relatively deep penetration into the vessel wall

  • This is achieved by ence tomography (IVOCT) has largely advanced understand- inserting a catheter into the coronary artery, pushing away the ing and treatment of one of the most common Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), the coronary artery disease.[2,3,4,5]

  • There is no consented standard for the imaging range, unlike, for example, in computed tomography (CT), meaning that IVOCT images generated with different commercially available systems are typically characterized by different intensity ranges

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Summary

Introduction

Source is around 1300 nm, which permits a relatively deep penetration into the vessel wall. Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of death worldwide.[1] Introduction of intravascular optical cohercates that the images are acquired from the inside of the blood vessel. This is achieved by ence tomography (IVOCT) has largely advanced understand- inserting a catheter into the coronary artery, pushing away the ing and treatment of one of the most common CVDs, the coronary artery disease.[2,3,4,5] Design of IVOCT enables visualblood by injecting a flush media and pulling it back through the lesion location. Each cross-sectional image contains about 500 Alines from different directions. MN, USA), which saves the raw data in a 16-bit format, and the Lunawave from Terumo (Tokyo, Japan), which saves the raw data in a 8-bit format

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