Computational framework for the generation of one‐dimensional vascular models accounting for uncertainty in networks extracted from medical images

Author:

Bartolo Michelle A.1,Taylor‐LaPole Alyssa M.1ORCID,Gandhi Darsh12ORCID,Johnson Alexandria13,Li Yaqi14,Slack Emma15,Stevens Isaiah1,Turner Zachary G.16,Weigand Justin D.7,Puelz Charles7,Husmeier Dirk8,Olufsen Mette S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics North Carolina State University Raleigh NC USA

2. Department of Mathematics University of Texas at Arlington Arlington TX USA

3. Department of Mathematics and Statistics University of South Florida Tampa FL USA

4. North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics Durham NC USA

5. Department of Mathematics Colorado State University Fort Collins CO USA

6. School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Arizona State University Tempe AZ USA

7. Division of Cardiology, Department of Pediatrics Baylor College of Medicine Houston TX USA

8. School of Mathematics and Statistics University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

Abstract

AbstractOne‐dimensional (1D) cardiovascular models offer a non‐invasive method to answer medical questions, including predictions of wave‐reflection, shear stress, functional flow reserve, vascular resistance and compliance. This model type can predict patient‐specific outcomes by solving 1D fluid dynamics equations in geometric networks extracted from medical images. However, the inherent uncertainty in in vivo imaging introduces variability in network size and vessel dimensions, affecting haemodynamic predictions. Understanding the influence of variation in image‐derived properties is essential to assess the fidelity of model predictions. Numerous programs exist to render three‐dimensional surfaces and construct vessel centrelines. Still, there is no exact way to generate vascular trees from the centrelines while accounting for uncertainty in data. This study introduces an innovative framework employing statistical change point analysis to generate labelled trees that encode vessel dimensions and their associated uncertainty from medical images. To test this framework, we explore the impact of uncertainty in 1D haemodynamic predictions in a systemic and pulmonary arterial network. Simulations explore haemodynamic variations resulting from changes in vessel dimensions and segmentation; the latter is achieved by analysing multiple segmentations of the same images. Results demonstrate the importance of accurately defining vessel radii and lengths when generating high‐fidelity patient‐specific haemodynamics models. imageKey points This study introduces novel algorithms for generating labelled directed trees from medical images, focusing on accurate junction node placement and radius extraction using change points to provide haemodynamic predictions with uncertainty within expected measurement error. Geometric features, such as vessel dimension (length and radius) and network size, significantly impact pressure and flow predictions in both pulmonary and aortic arterial networks. Standardizing networks to a consistent number of vessels is crucial for meaningful comparisons and decreases haemodynamic uncertainty. Change points are valuable to understanding structural transitions in vascular data, providing an automated and efficient way to detect shifts in vessel characteristics and ensure reliable extraction of representative vessel radii.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Security Agency

Publisher

Wiley

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