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Rayleigh Mixture Model and its Application for Ultrasound-based Plaque Characterization José Seabra, Francesco Ciompi, Oriol Pujol, Petia Radeva and João.

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Presentation on theme: "Rayleigh Mixture Model and its Application for Ultrasound-based Plaque Characterization José Seabra, Francesco Ciompi, Oriol Pujol, Petia Radeva and João."— Presentation transcript:

1 Rayleigh Mixture Model and its Application for Ultrasound-based Plaque Characterization José Seabra, Francesco Ciompi, Oriol Pujol, Petia Radeva and João Sanches Instituto de Sistemas e Robótica, IST Lisboa Centre de Visió per Computador, Barcelona Workshop Programa Doutoral em Engenharia Biomédica 15 Julho 2009

2 Introduction Rayleigh Mixture ModelPlaque ClassificationResultsConclusions  Vulnerable plaques are a major source of carotid and coronary circulatory events  B-mode ultrasound and IVUS provide accurate representation of the arterial wall and plaque  Identification of vulnerable plaques comes from the correct modeling of tissue echo- morphology and characterization of its composition  Under particular conditions, pixel intensity observations belonging to ultrasound images are well modeled by Rayleigh probability density functions (pdfs)  Proposal:  to characterize the echo-morphology of plaques by use of a mixture of Rayleigh distributions  to incorporate the Rayleigh Mixture Model (RMM) in a 3-type plaque classification problem

3 Introduction Rayleigh Mixture Model Plaque ClassificationResultsConclusions  A plaque (as other tissue) can be regarded as a complex structure (see Fig.1) where phenomena, including absorption, diffuse and structural scattering, occur and combine Figure 1. Tissue Acoustic model

4 Introduction Rayleigh Mixture Model Plaque ClassificationResultsConclusions  Figure 2. Effect of the Rayleigh reflectivity parameter on the pdf

5 Introduction Rayleigh Mixture Model Plaque ClassificationResultsConclusions  Simulation study for testing the RMM in a synthetic image Figure 3. a) Tissue sample and b) diagonal D intensity profile. c) MLE of the Rayleigh pdf for region S, and d) comparison between MLE Rayleigh pdf and mixture pdf for the whole tissue sample

6 IntroductionRayleigh Mixture Model Plaque Classification ResultsConclusions Figure 4. a) IVUS data acquisition and analysis from a post-mortem human coronary artery. B) Histological analysis of a slice of the artery. (c) a reliable correspondence in the IVUS image is established by using a suitable labeling software. (d) Rotation catheter, (e) Polar vs reconstructed IVUS image (d) (e)  Plaque characterization is based on an IVUS study of the coronary arteries  Features are based on images reconstructed from the RF data  67 plaques were labeled according to their composition as lipidic, fibrotic or calcified

7 IntroductionRayleigh Mixture Model Plaque Classification ResultsConclusions (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) Figure 5. a) IVUS image showing three plaques (tissues) labeled according to their composition. (b-c) De-speckle and speckle image (the regularization effect is visible). (d-e) RMM estimated from the three labeled distinct plaques  RMM estimation for 3 different plaques, generation of de-speckled and speckle images

8 IntroductionRayleigh Mixture ModelPlaque Classification Results Conclusions Figure 6. a) Feature space, where the dataset of 67 plaques of different types is plotted according to the mixture coefficients. b) 3-type plaque-content characterization using RMM computed with different number of mixture components  Performance was evaluated by means of the Leave-One-Patient-Out (LOPO) cross-validation technique, using the Adaboost classifier with Error-Correcting-Output Codes (ECOC)  1st Result: Plaque-content classification using RMM features (b) (a)

9 IntroductionRayleigh Mixture ModelPlaque Classification Results Conclusions Figure 7. a) Feature space, where the dataset of 67 plaques of different types is plotted according to the mixture coefficients. b) 3-type plaque-content characterization using RMM computed with different number of mixture components. c) Graphical classification  2nd Result: Local-wise classification by use of a feature set including RMM, Speckle, Textural and Spectral features RMM Speckle Texture Spectrum Features Weights (b) (a) (c)

10 IntroductionRayleigh Mixture ModelPlaque ClassificationResults Conclusions  A generic method to model the tissue echo-morphology is proposed based on the mixture of Rayleigh distributions  Our study suggests that different plaque types can be distinguished based on the coefficients (weights) and Rayleigh parameters of each distribution of the mixture  The inclusion of mixture parameters in a classification framework has shown to improve the discriminative power between different plaque types, leading to high classification accuracies  A medical supervised plaque classification tool based on RMM can be developed, given that what is suspected to be a plaque is previously segmented and provided to the algorithm  FUTURE:  Change from Rayleigh mixture to Rician mixture  Apply this “mixture concept” and its features to classification of symptomatic carotid plaques


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