Abstract

Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) imaging offers accurate cross-sectional vessel information. To this end, registering temporal IVUS pullbacks acquired at two time points can assist the clinicians to accurately assess pathophysiological changes in the vessels, disease progression and the effect of the treatment intervention. In this paper, we present a novel two-stage registration framework for aligning pairs of longitudinal and axial IVUS pullbacks. Initially, we use a Dynamic Time Warping (DTW)-based algorithm to align the pullbacks in a temporal fashion. Subsequently, an intensity-based registration method, that utilizes a variant of the Harmony Search optimizer to register each matched pair of the pullbacks by maximizing their Mutual Information, is applied. The presented method is fully automated and only required two single global image-based measurements, unlike other methods that require extraction of morphology-based features. The data used includes 42 synthetically generated pullback pairs, achieving an alignment error of frames per pullback, a rotation error and a translation error of mm. In addition, it was also tested on 11 baseline and follow-up, and 10 baseline and post-stent deployment real IVUS pullback pairs from two clinical centres, achieving an alignment error of for the longitudinal registration, and a distance and a rotational error of mm and , respectively, for the axial registration. Although the performance of the proposed method does not match that of the state-of-the-art, our method relies on computationally lighter steps for its computations, which is crucial in real-time applications. On the other hand, the proposed method performs even or better that the state-of-the-art when considering the axial registration. The results indicate that the proposed method can support clinical decision making and diagnosis based on sequential imaging examinations.

Highlights

  • Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) is an imaging technique for visualizing the internal vascular structure in order to assist with the diagnosis of the atherosclerotic disease giving information about the stenosis, as well as the plaque composition in the arterial wall

  • IVUS pullbacks are obtained using an ultrasound transducer attached to a catheter which is mechanically dragged inside the arterial vessel

  • The data of 10 patients consisted of two IVUS pullbacks, corresponding to a pre- and a post-stent deployment pullbacks respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) is an imaging technique for visualizing the internal vascular structure in order to assist with the diagnosis of the atherosclerotic disease giving information about the stenosis, as well as the plaque composition in the arterial wall. IVUS pullbacks are obtained using an ultrasound transducer attached to a catheter which is mechanically dragged inside the arterial vessel (from the distal to the proximal position). Comparison of IVUS pullbacks acquired at two time points enable the estimation of the disease progression over time. In order for this to be achieved, it is often the case that two IVUS pullbacks need to be compared by the healthcare professional, which is a time consuming process

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