1. Cardiac disease discrimination from 3D-convolutional kinematic patterns on cine-MRI sequences.
- Author
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Moreno Tarazona A, Bautista LX, and Martínez F
- Subjects
- Humans, Biomechanical Phenomena, Myocardial Infarction diagnostic imaging, Myocardial Infarction physiopathology, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic diagnostic imaging, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic physiopathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Heart Diseases diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Introduction: Cine-MRI (cine-magnetic resonance imaging) sequences are a key diagnostic tool to visualize anatomical information, allowing experts to localize and determine suspicious pathologies. Nonetheless, such analysis remains subjective and prone to diagnosis errors., Objective: To develop a binary and multi-class classification considering various cardiac conditions using a spatiotemporal model that highlights kinematic movements to characterize each disease., Materials and Methods: This research focuses on a 3D convolutional representation to characterize cardiac kinematic patterns during the cardiac cycle, which may be associated with pathologies. The kinematic maps are obtained from the apparent velocity maps computed from a dense optical flow strategy. Then, a 3D convolutional scheme learns to differentiate pathologies from kinematic maps., Results: The proposed strategy was validated with respect to the capability to discriminate among myocardial infarction, dilated cardiomyopathy, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, abnormal right ventricle, and normal cardiac sequences. The proposed method achieves an average accuracy of 78.00% and a F1 score of 75.55%. Likewise, the approach achieved 92.31% accuracy for binary classification between pathologies and control cases., Conclusion: The proposed method can support the identification of kinematically abnormal patterns associated with a pathological condition. The resultant descriptor, learned from the 3D convolutional net, preserves detailed spatiotemporal correlations and could emerge as possible digital biomarkers of cardiac diseases.
- Published
- 2024
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