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  4. Motion artifact recognition and quantification in coronary CT angiography using convolutional neural networks
 
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Motion artifact recognition and quantification in coronary CT angiography using convolutional neural networks

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2019-02
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Lossau, Tanja  
Nickisch, Hannes  
Wissel, Tobias  
Bippus, Rolf  
Schmitt, Holger  
Morlock, Michael  
Grass, Michael  
Institut
Biomechanik M-3  
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/2322
Journal
Medical image analysis  
Volume
52
Start Page
68
End Page
79
Citation
Medical image analysis (52): 68-79 (2019-02)
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.media.2018.11.003
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85056852038
Excellent image quality is a primary prerequisite for diagnostic non-invasive coronary CT angiography. Artifacts due to cardiac motion may interfere with detection and diagnosis of coronary artery disease and render subsequent treatment decisions more difficult. We propose deep-learning-based measures for coronary motion artifact recognition and quantification in order to assess the diagnostic reliability and image quality of coronary CT angiography images. More specifically, the application, steering and evaluation of motion compensation algorithms can be triggered by these measures. A Coronary Motion Forward Artifact model for CT data (CoMoFACT) is developed and applied to clinical cases with excellent image quality to introduce motion artifacts using simulated motion vector fields. The data required for supervised learning is generated by the CoMoFACT from 17 prospectively ECG-triggered clinical cases with controlled motion levels on a scale of 0-10. Convolutional neural networks achieve an accuracy of 93.3% ± 1.8% for the classification task of separating motion-free from motion-perturbed coronary cross-sectional image patches. The target motion level is predicted by a corresponding regression network with a mean absolute error of 1.12 ± 0.07. Transferability and generalization capabilities are demonstrated by motion artifact measurements on eight additional CCTA cases with real motion artifacts.
Subjects
Cardiac CT
Convolutional neural network
Coronary angiography
Motion artifact measure
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