Paper
14 April 2005 Characterization of sub-resolution microcirculatory status using whole-body CT imaging
Yue Dong M.D., Nasser M. Malyar M.D., Patricia E. Beighley, Erik L. Ritman M.D.
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Myocardial microcirculation disturbances often precede angiographically visible of narrowing large epicardial coronary arteries and associated symptoms. Clinical tomographic imaging cannot resolve the microcirculation, hence an indirect method of quantitating microvascular disturbances in those images must be developed. We propose that such an indirect method can be based on the characterization of the spatial heterogeneity of myocardial intravascular blood volume. We evaluated the relationship of multi-resolution, nested multi Region-of-Interest (ROI) analysis of EBCT images to the actual intravascular volume of microvascular branches as measured directly with micro-CT images in the same myocardial regions. We selectively altered the intravascular volume of vessels by injecting 30, 100, 200 or 300μm diameter microspheres into anesthetized pigs’ LAD coronary arteries prior to EBCT scanning during contrast injection. The heart was then harvested and the LAD coronary artery was infused with Microfil polymer. An approximately 2cm3 transmural “biopsy” of the same ROI within the myocardium analyzed in the EBCT images was scanned by micro-CT resulting in a 3D image of 20μm cubic voxels. Myocardial opacification was measured in both the EBCT and micro-CT images. The EBCT and micro-CT images were analyzed with the nested multi ROI method which provides an index of spatial heterogeneity of intramyocardial blood volume in terms of the linear relationship between the logarithms of the coefficient of variation within the data obtained at any one size of the ROI, and the logarithm of the volume of that selected ROI. The minimum ROI volume in the EBCT analysis was 8.96 mm3 and for the micro-CT it was 0.07 mm3. There is linear correlation when EBCT and micro-CT image CT gray-scale numbers are plotted as Log (standard deviation/mean) against Log (Volume of ROI). The results show that the slopes and offsets of the EBCT-based and micro-CT-based regression lines were indistinguishable. Moreover, when a fraction of microvessels of selected diameter was embolized, the change in the resulting regression line was characteristic for that diameter. In summary, the EBCT-based analysis spatial heterogeneity of myocardial blood volume can be extrapolated to describe the spatial distribution of the microcirculatory branching geometry in terms of intra segmental lumen volume.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Yue Dong M.D., Nasser M. Malyar M.D., Patricia E. Beighley, and Erik L. Ritman M.D. "Characterization of sub-resolution microcirculatory status using whole-body CT imaging", Proc. SPIE 5746, Medical Imaging 2005: Physiology, Function, and Structure from Medical Images, (14 April 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.595986
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Scanners

Blood

Computed tomography

Arteries

Fractal analysis

Statistical analysis

Image analysis

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