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Prediction of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms Using Sparse Gaussian Process Regression

Authors :
Jongeun Choi
W. Lee
Seungik Baek
Ahsan Ijaz
Source :
Volume 1B: Extremity; Fluid Mechanics; Gait; Growth, Remodeling, and Repair; Heart Valves; Injury Biomechanics; Mechanotransduction and Sub-Cellular Biophysics; MultiScale Biotransport; Muscle, Tendon and Ligament; Musculoskeletal Devices; Multiscale Mechanics; Thermal Medicine; Ocular Biomechanics; Pediatric Hemodynamics; Pericellular Phenomena; Tissue Mechanics; Biotransport Design and Devices; Spine; Stent Device Hemodynamics; Vascular Solid Mechanics; Student Paper and Design Competitions.
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013.

Abstract

Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms (AAA) is a form of vascular disease causing focal enlargement of abdominal aorta. It affects a large part of population and has up to 90% mortality rate. Since risks from open surgery or endovascular repair outweighs the risk of AAA rupture, surgical treatments are not recommended with AAA less than 5.5cm in diameter. Recent clinical recommendations suggest that people with small aneurysms should be examined 3∼36 months depending on size to get information about morphological changes. While advances in biomechanics provide state-of-the-art spatial estimates of stress distributions of AAA, there are still limitations in modeling its time evolution. Thus, there is no biomechanical framework to utilize such information from a series of medical images that would aid physicians in detecting small aneurysms with high risk of rupture. For the present study, we use series of CT images of small AAAs taken at different times to model and predict the spatio-temporal evolution of AAA. This is achieved using sparse local Gaussian process regression.Copyright © 2013 by ASME

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Volume 1B: Extremity; Fluid Mechanics; Gait; Growth, Remodeling, and Repair; Heart Valves; Injury Biomechanics; Mechanotransduction and Sub-Cellular Biophysics; MultiScale Biotransport; Muscle, Tendon and Ligament; Musculoskeletal Devices; Multiscale Mechanics; Thermal Medicine; Ocular Biomechanics; Pediatric Hemodynamics; Pericellular Phenomena; Tissue Mechanics; Biotransport Design and Devices; Spine; Stent Device Hemodynamics; Vascular Solid Mechanics; Student Paper and Design Competitions
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........81edd8abcc7be1d4bfe294313fbc65d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1115/sbc2013-14698