Loading…

Necrotic tissue distribution analysis: Preliminary investigation for reducing necrosis overestimation in intravascular ultrasound virtual histology images

Background: The intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) Virtual Histology (VH) classifies the atherosclerotic plaque components, according to four classes - fibrous (FT), fibrofatty (FF), dense calcium (DC), and necrotic tissue (NC). Past works have proven a possible overestimation of necrotic content in VH...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sales, Fernando J. R., Falcao, Breno A. A., Falcao, Joao L. A. A., Furuie, Sergio S., Lemos, Pedro A.
Format: Conference Proceeding
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:Request full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Background: The intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) Virtual Histology (VH) classifies the atherosclerotic plaque components, according to four classes - fibrous (FT), fibrofatty (FF), dense calcium (DC), and necrotic tissue (NC). Past works have proven a possible overestimation of necrotic content in VH images, particularly when NC is confluent to DC. Additionally, NC has been used as a severity marker for atherosclerotic plaque. Aiming to observe a possible correction rule for overestimation problem, an experiment was designed. Eight patients have been submitted to stent implantation (PCI). VH examinations have been performed before (PRE) and after (POS) PCI, totalizing more than 300 frames. NC content was divided into two classes: RW and RP, which corresponds, respectively, to NC confluent to DC and not confluent. Grayscale IVUS images were processed to extract normalized intensity histograms according to NC classification. Differences between intensity distributions RW and RP necrotic tissue were found, which may be useful to be considered to minimize overestimation of necrosis in VH images. These preliminary results encourage further investigation with larger sample sizes for proposing correction-imaging methods.
ISSN:0276-6574
2325-8853