cmr image
Deformable Image Registration for Self-supervised Cardiac Phase Detection in Multi-View Multi-Disease Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Images
Koehler, Sven, Mueller, Sarah Kaye, Kiekenap, Jonathan, Greil, Gerald, Hussain, Tarique, Sarikouch, Samir, André, Florian, Frey, Norbert, Engelhardt, Sandy
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is the gold standard for assessing cardiac function, but individual cardiac cycles complicate automatic temporal comparison or sub-phase analysis. Accurate cardiac keyframe detection can eliminate this problem. However, automatic methods solely derive end-systole (ES) and end-diastole (ED) frames from left ventricular volume curves, which do not provide a deeper insight into myocardial motion. We propose a self-supervised deep learning method detecting five keyframes in short-axis (SAX) and four-chamber long-axis (4CH) cine CMR. Initially, dense deformable registration fields are derived from the images and used to compute a 1D motion descriptor, which provides valuable insights into global cardiac contraction and relaxation patterns. From these characteristic curves, keyframes are determined using a simple set of rules. The method was independently evaluated for both views using three public, multicentre, multidisease datasets. M&Ms-2 (n=360) dataset was used for training and evaluation, and M&Ms (n=345) and ACDC (n=100) datasets for repeatability control. Furthermore, generalisability to patients with rare congenital heart defects was tested using the German Competence Network (GCN) dataset. Our self-supervised approach achieved improved detection accuracy by 30% - 51% for SAX and 11% - 47% for 4CH in ED and ES, as measured by cyclic frame difference (cFD), compared with the volume-based approach. We can detect ED and ES, as well as three additional keyframes throughout the cardiac cycle with a mean cFD below 1.31 frames for SAX and 1.73 for LAX. Our approach enables temporally aligned inter- and intra-patient analysis of cardiac dynamics, irrespective of cycle or phase lengths. GitHub repository: https://github.com/Cardio-AI/cmr-multi-view-phase-detection.git
- North America > United States (0.04)
- Europe > Spain > Andalusia > Granada Province > Granada (0.04)
- Europe > Greece > Attica > Athens (0.04)
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- Research Report > Experimental Study (1.00)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.94)
Cardiac Digital Twins at Scale from MRI: Open Tools and Representative Models from ~55000 UK Biobank Participants
Ugurlu, Devran, Qian, Shuang, Fairweather, Elliot, Mauger, Charlene, Ruijsink, Bram, Toso, Laura Dal, Deng, Yu, Strocchi, Marina, Razavi, Reza, Young, Alistair, Lamata, Pablo, Niederer, Steven, Bishop, Martin
A cardiac digital twin is a virtual replica of a patient's heart for screening, diagnosis, prognosis, risk assessment, and treatment planning of cardiovascular diseases. This requires an anatomically accurate patient-specific 3D structural representation of the heart, suitable for electro-mechanical simulations or study of disease mechanisms. However, generation of cardiac digital twins at scale is demanding and there are no public repositories of models across demographic groups. We describe an automatic open-source pipeline for creating patient-specific left and right ventricular meshes from cardiovascular magnetic resonance images, its application to a large cohort of ~55000 participants from UK Biobank, and the construction of the most comprehensive cohort of adult heart models to date, comprising 1423 representative meshes across sex (male, female), body mass index (range: 16 - 42 kg/m$^2$) and age (range: 49 - 80 years). Our code is available at https://github.com/cdttk/biv-volumetric-meshing/tree/plos2025 , and pre-trained networks, representative volumetric meshes with fibers and UVCs will be made available soon.
- Europe > Switzerland > Zürich > Zürich (0.14)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Greater London > London (0.04)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Cardiology/Vascular Diseases (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Diagnostic Medicine > Imaging (1.00)
Does a Rising Tide Lift All Boats? Bias Mitigation for AI-based CMR Segmentation
Lee, Tiarna, Puyol-Antón, Esther, Ruijsink, Bram, Shi, Miaojing, King, Andrew P.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly being used for medical imaging tasks. However, there can be biases in the resulting models, particularly when they were trained using imbalanced training datasets. One such example has been the strong race bias effect in cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) image segmentation models. Although this phenomenon has been reported in a number of publications, little is known about the effectiveness of bias mitigation algorithms in this domain. We aim to investigate the impact of common bias mitigation methods to address bias between Black and White subjects in AI-based CMR segmentation models. Specifically, we use oversampling, importance reweighing and Group DRO as well as combinations of these techniques to mitigate the race bias. Furthermore, motivated by recent findings on the root causes of AI-based CMR segmentation bias, we evaluate the same methods using models trained and evaluated on cropped CMR images. We find that bias can be mitigated using oversampling, significantly improving performance for the underrepresented Black subjects whilst not significantly reducing the majority White subjects' performance. Group DRO also improves performance for Black subjects but not significantly, while reweighing decreases performance for Black subjects. Using a combination of oversampling and Group DRO also improves performance for Black subjects but not significantly. Using cropped images increases performance for both races and reduces the bias, whilst adding oversampling as a bias mitigation technique with cropped images reduces the bias further.
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- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Greater London > London (0.05)
- North America > Canada > Alberta > Census Division No. 6 > Calgary Metropolitan Region > Calgary (0.04)
- Asia > China (0.04)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.70)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.69)
Large-scale cross-modality pretrained model enhances cardiovascular state estimation and cardiomyopathy detection from electrocardiograms: An AI system development and multi-center validation study
Ding, Zhengyao, Hu, Yujian, Xu, Youyao, Zhao, Chengchen, Li, Ziyu, Mao, Yiheng, Li, Haitao, Li, Qian, Wang, Jing, Chen, Yue, Chen, Mengjia, Wang, Longbo, Chu, Xuesen, Pan, Weichao, Liu, Ziyi, Wu, Fei, Zhang, Hongkun, Chen, Ting, Huang, Zhengxing
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) present significant challenges for early and accurate diagnosis. While cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) is the gold standard for assessing cardiac function and diagnosing CVDs, its high cost and technical complexity limit accessibility. In contrast, electrocardiography (ECG) offers promise for large-scale early screening. This study introduces CardiacNets, an innovative model that enhances ECG analysis by leveraging the diagnostic strengths of CMR through cross-modal contrastive learning and generative pretraining. CardiacNets serves two primary functions: (1) it evaluates detailed cardiac function indicators and screens for potential CVDs, including coronary artery disease, cardiomyopathy, pericarditis, heart failure and pulmonary hypertension, using ECG input; and (2) it enhances interpretability by generating high-quality CMR images from ECG data. We train and validate the proposed CardiacNets on two large-scale public datasets (the UK Biobank with 41,519 individuals and the MIMIC-IV-ECG comprising 501,172 samples) as well as three private datasets (FAHZU with 410 individuals, SAHZU with 464 individuals, and QPH with 338 individuals), and the findings demonstrate that CardiacNets consistently outperforms traditional ECG-only models, substantially improving screening accuracy. Furthermore, the generated CMR images provide valuable diagnostic support for physicians of all experience levels. This proof-of-concept study highlights how ECG can facilitate cross-modal insights into cardiac function assessment, paving the way for enhanced CVD screening and diagnosis at a population level.
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- Asia > China > Zhejiang Province > Hangzhou (0.05)
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Enhancing Cardiovascular Disease Prediction through Multi-Modal Self-Supervised Learning
Girlanda, Francesco, Demler, Olga, Menze, Bjoern, Davoudi, Neda
Accurate prediction of cardiovascular diseases remains imperative for early diagnosis and intervention, necessitating robust and precise predictive models. Recently, there has been a growing interest in multi-modal learning for uncovering novel insights not available through uni-modal datasets alone. By combining cardiac magnetic resonance images, electrocardiogram signals, and available medical information, our approach enables the capture of holistic status about individuals' cardiovascular health by leveraging shared information across modalities. Integrating information from multiple modalities and benefiting from self-supervised learning techniques, our model provides a comprehensive framework for enhancing cardiovascular disease prediction with limited annotated datasets. We employ a masked autoencoder to pre-train the electrocardiogram ECG encoder, enabling it to extract relevant features from raw electrocardiogram data, and an image encoder to extract relevant features from cardiac magnetic resonance images. Subsequently, we utilize a multi-modal contrastive learning objective to transfer knowledge from expensive and complex modality, cardiac magnetic resonance image, to cheap and simple modalities such as electrocardiograms and medical information. Finally, we fine-tuned the pre-trained encoders on specific predictive tasks, such as myocardial infarction. Our proposed method enhanced the image information by leveraging different available modalities and outperformed the supervised approach by 7.6% in balanced accuracy.
- Europe > Switzerland > Zürich > Zürich (0.15)
- North America > United States > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom (0.04)
An investigation into the causes of race bias in AI-based cine CMR segmentation
Lee, Tiarna, Puyol-Anton, Esther, Ruijsink, Bram, Roujol, Sebastien, Barfoot, Theodore, Ogbomo-Harmitt, Shaheim, Shi, Miaojing, King, Andrew P.
Artificial intelligence (AI) methods are being used increasingly for the automated segmentation of cine cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging. However, these methods have been shown to be subject to race bias, i.e. they exhibit different levels of performance for different races depending on the (im)balance of the data used to train the AI model. In this paper we investigate the source of this bias, seeking to understand its root cause(s) so that it can be effectively mitigated. We perform a series of classification and segmentation experiments on short-axis cine CMR images acquired from Black and White subjects from the UK Biobank and apply AI interpretability methods to understand the results. In the classification experiments, we found that race can be predicted with high accuracy from the images alone, but less accurately from ground truth segmentations, suggesting that the distributional shift between races, which is often the cause of AI bias, is mostly image-based rather than segmentation-based. The interpretability methods showed that most attention in the classification models was focused on non-heart regions, such as subcutaneous fat. Cropping the images tightly around the heart reduced classification accuracy to around chance level. Similarly, race can be predicted from the latent representations of a biased segmentation model, suggesting that race information is encoded in the model. Cropping images tightly around the heart reduced but did not eliminate segmentation bias. We also investigate the influence of possible confounders on the bias observed.
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- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Greater London > London (0.05)
- North America > Canada > Alberta > Census Division No. 6 > Calgary Metropolitan Region > Calgary (0.04)
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- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Cardiology/Vascular Diseases (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Diagnostic Medicine > Imaging (1.00)
- Information Technology > Sensing and Signal Processing > Image Processing (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Statistical Learning (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Performance Analysis > Accuracy (0.49)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Neural Networks > Deep Learning (0.47)
Automatic Diagnosis of Myocarditis Disease in Cardiac MRI Modality using Deep Transformers and Explainable Artificial Intelligence
Jafari, Mahboobeh, Shoeibi, Afshin, Ghassemi, Navid, Heras, Jonathan, Ling, Sai Ho, Beheshti, Amin, Zhang, Yu-Dong, Wang, Shui-Hua, Alizadehsani, Roohallah, Gorriz, Juan M., Acharya, U. Rajendra, Rokny, Hamid Alinejad
Myocarditis is a significant cardiovascular disease (CVD) that poses a threat to the health of many individuals by causing damage to the myocardium. The occurrence of microbes and viruses, including the likes of HIV, plays a crucial role in the development of myocarditis disease (MCD). The images produced during cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMRI) scans are low contrast, which can make it challenging to diagnose cardiovascular diseases. In other hand, checking numerous CMRI slices for each CVD patient can be a challenging task for medical doctors. To overcome the existing challenges, researchers have suggested the use of artificial intelligence (AI)-based computer-aided diagnosis systems (CADS). The presented paper outlines a CADS for the detection of MCD from CMR images, utilizing deep learning (DL) methods. The proposed CADS consists of several steps, including dataset, preprocessing, feature extraction, classification, and post-processing. First, the Z-Alizadeh dataset was selected for the experiments. Subsequently, the CMR images underwent various preprocessing steps, including denoising, resizing, as well as data augmentation (DA) via CutMix and MixUp techniques. In the following, the most current deep pre-trained and transformer models are used for feature extraction and classification on the CMR images. The findings of our study reveal that transformer models exhibit superior performance in detecting MCD as opposed to pre-trained architectures. In terms of DL architectures, the Turbulence Neural Transformer (TNT) model exhibited impressive accuracy, reaching 99.73% utilizing a 10-fold cross-validation approach. Additionally, to pinpoint areas of suspicion for MCD in CMRI images, the Explainable-based Grad Cam method was employed.
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- Oceania > Australia > New South Wales > Sydney (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Iran > Tehran Province > Tehran (0.04)
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Unlocking the Diagnostic Potential of ECG through Knowledge Transfer from Cardiac MRI
Turgut, Özgün, Müller, Philip, Hager, Paul, Shit, Suprosanna, Starck, Sophie, Menten, Martin J., Martens, Eimo, Rueckert, Daniel
The electrocardiogram (ECG) is a widely available diagnostic tool that allows for a cost-effective and fast assessment of the cardiovascular health. However, more detailed examination with expensive cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging is often preferred for the diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases. While providing detailed visualization of the cardiac anatomy, CMR imaging is not widely available due to long scan times and high costs. To address this issue, we propose the first self-supervised contrastive approach that transfers domain-specific information from CMR images to ECG embeddings. Our approach combines multimodal contrastive learning with masked data modeling to enable holistic cardiac screening solely from ECG data. In extensive experiments using data from 40,044 UK Biobank subjects, we demonstrate the utility and generalizability of our method. We predict the subject-specific risk of various cardiovascular diseases and determine distinct cardiac phenotypes solely from ECG data. In a qualitative analysis, we demonstrate that our learned ECG embeddings incorporate information from CMR image regions of interest. We make our entire pipeline publicly available, including the source code and pre-trained model weights.
- Europe > Germany > Bavaria > Upper Bavaria > Munich (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Greater London > London (0.04)
Prediction of Geometric Transformation on Cardiac MRI via Convolutional Neural Network
In the field of medical image, deep convolutional neural networks(ConvNets) have achieved great success in the classification, segmentation, and registration tasks thanks to their unparalleled capacity to learn image features. However, these tasks often require large amounts of manually annotated data and are labor-intensive. Therefore, it is of significant importance for us to study unsupervised semantic feature learning tasks. In our work, we propose to learn features in medical images by training ConvNets to recognize the geometric transformation applied to images and present a simple self-supervised task that can easily predict the geometric transformation. We precisely define a set of geometric transformations in mathematical terms and generalize this model to 3D, taking into account the distinction between spatial and time dimensions. We evaluated our self-supervised method on CMR images of different modalities (bSSFP, T2, LGE) and achieved accuracies of 96.4%, 97.5%, and 96.4%, respectively. The code and models of our paper will be published on: https://github.com/gaoxin492/Geometric_Transformation_CMR
- North America > United States > New York > New York County > New York City (0.04)
- Asia > China > Shanghai > Shanghai (0.04)
Automated Diagnosis of Cardiovascular Diseases from Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging Using Deep Learning Models: A Review
Jafari, Mahboobeh, Shoeibi, Afshin, Khodatars, Marjane, Ghassemi, Navid, Moridian, Parisa, Delfan, Niloufar, Alizadehsani, Roohallah, Khosravi, Abbas, Ling, Sai Ho, Zhang, Yu-Dong, Wang, Shui-Hua, Gorriz, Juan M., Rokny, Hamid Alinejad, Acharya, U. Rajendra
In recent years, cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) have become one of the leading causes of mortality globally. CVDs appear with minor symptoms and progressively get worse. The majority of people experience symptoms such as exhaustion, shortness of breath, ankle swelling, fluid retention, and other symptoms when starting CVD. Coronary artery disease (CAD), arrhythmia, cardiomyopathy, congenital heart defect (CHD), mitral regurgitation, and angina are the most common CVDs. Clinical methods such as blood tests, electrocardiography (ECG) signals, and medical imaging are the most effective methods used for the detection of CVDs. Among the diagnostic methods, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) is increasingly used to diagnose, monitor the disease, plan treatment and predict CVDs. Coupled with all the advantages of CMR data, CVDs diagnosis is challenging for physicians due to many slices of data, low contrast, etc. To address these issues, deep learning (DL) techniques have been employed to the diagnosis of CVDs using CMR data, and much research is currently being conducted in this field. This review provides an overview of the studies performed in CVDs detection using CMR images and DL techniques. The introduction section examined CVDs types, diagnostic methods, and the most important medical imaging techniques. In the following, investigations to detect CVDs using CMR images and the most significant DL methods are presented. Another section discussed the challenges in diagnosing CVDs from CMR data. Next, the discussion section discusses the results of this review, and future work in CVDs diagnosis from CMR images and DL techniques are outlined. The most important findings of this study are presented in the conclusion section.
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