Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Med Phys. 2012 Mar;39(3):1595-608. doi: 10.1118/1.3685589.
Lung function depends on lung expansion and contraction during the respiratory cycle. Respiratory-gated CT imaging and 3D image registration can be used to locally estimate lung tissue expansion and contraction (regional lung volume change) by computing the determinant of the Jacobian matrix of the image registration deformation field. In this study, the authors examine the reproducibility of Jacobian-based measures of lung tissue expansion in two repeat 4DCT acquisitions of mechanically ventilated sheep and free-breathing humans.
4DCT image data from three white sheep and nine human subjects were used for this analysis. In each case, two 4DCT studies were acquired for each subject within a short time interval. The animal subjects were anesthetized and mechanically ventilated, while the humans were awake and spontaneously breathing based on respiratory pacing audio cues. From each 4DCT data set, an image pair consisting of a volume reconstructed near end inspiration and a volume reconstructed near end exhalation was selected. The end inspiration and end exhalation images were registered using a tissue volume preserving deformable registration algorithm and the Jacobian of the registration deformation field was used to measure regional lung expansion. The Jacobian map from the baseline data set was compared to the Jacobian map from the followup data by measuring the voxel-by-voxel Jacobian ratio.
In the animal subjects, the mean Jacobian ratio (baseline scan Jacobian divided by followup scan Jacobian, voxel-by-voxel) was 0.9984±0.021 (mean ± standard deviation, averaged over the entire lung region). The mean Jacobian ratio was 1.0224±0.058 in the human subjects. The reproducibility of the Jacobian values was found to be strongly dependent on the reproducibility of the subject's respiratory effort and breathing pattern.
Lung expansion, a surrogate for lung function, can be assessed using two or more respiratory-gated CT image acquisitions. The results show that good reproducibility can be obtained in anesthetized, mechanically ventilated animals, but variations in respiratory effort and breathing patterns reduce reproducibility in spontaneously-breathing humans. The global linear normalization can globally compensate for breathing effort differences, but a homogeneous scaling does not account for differences in regional lung expansion rates. Additional work is needed to develop compensation procedures or normalization schemes that can account for local variations in lung expansion during respiration.
肺功能取决于呼吸周期中肺的扩张和收缩。呼吸门控 CT 成像和 3D 图像配准可通过计算图像配准变形场的雅可比行列式来局部估计肺组织的扩张和收缩(局部肺容积变化)。在这项研究中,作者通过重复获取机械通气绵羊和自主呼吸人类的 4DCT 检查来检查基于雅可比行列式的肺组织扩张测量的可重复性。
使用三只绵羊和九名人类受试者的 4DCT 图像数据进行了此项分析。在每种情况下,对每位受试者在短时间间隔内采集两次 4DCT 研究。动物受试者接受麻醉并接受机械通气,而人类受试者则根据呼吸起搏音频提示进行清醒自主呼吸。从每个 4DCT 数据集选择一组由在接近吸气末重建的体积和在接近呼气末重建的体积组成的图像对。使用组织体积保持可变形配准算法对吸气末和呼气末图像进行配准,并使用配准变形场的雅可比行列式来测量局部肺扩张。通过测量体素对体素的雅可比比,将基线数据集的雅可比图与随访数据集的雅可比图进行比较。
在动物受试者中,平均雅可比比(基线扫描雅可比除以随访扫描雅可比,体素对体素)为 0.9984±0.021(平均值±标准差,整个肺区域平均)。人类受试者的平均雅可比比为 1.0224±0.058。雅可比值的可重复性发现强烈依赖于受试者呼吸努力和呼吸模式的可重复性。
可以使用两次或多次呼吸门控 CT 图像采集来评估肺扩张,这是肺功能的替代指标。结果表明,在麻醉、机械通气的动物中可以获得良好的可重复性,但呼吸努力和呼吸模式的变化会降低自主呼吸人类的可重复性。全局线性归一化可以全局补偿呼吸努力的差异,但均匀缩放并不能说明局部肺扩张率的差异。需要进一步研究开发能够在呼吸过程中补偿局部肺扩张差异的补偿程序或归一化方案。