Medial-ABC: an algorithm for the correspondence between myocardium and coronary artery mesh models based on the medial axis of coronary artery

Author:

Cha Jehyun1,Ryu Joonghyun2,Choi Jin-Ho34,Kim Deok-Soo12

Affiliation:

1. School of Mechanical Engineering, Hanyang University, Seoul 04763, South Korea

2. Voronoi Diagram Research Center, Hanyang University, Seoul 04763, South Korea

3. School of Medicine, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, Gyeonggi-do 16419, South Korea

4. Department of Emergency Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul 06351, South Korea

Abstract

AbstractThe role of coronary arteries is to supply sufficient blood to myocardium. Obstruction of coronary arteries limits blood supply and causes myocardial ischemia or acute myocardial infarction, a major cause of human death. Hence, the quantification of the regional amount of heart muscle subtended by obstructed coronary arteries is of critical value in clinical medicine. However, conventional methods are inaccurate and frequently disagree with clinical practice. This study proposes a novel medial-axis-based correspondence (Medial-ABC) algorithm to find the correspondence between myocardium and coronary artery in order to segment regional myocardium at risk subtended by any potentially obstructed coronary artery. Given the triangular mesh models of coronary artery and myocardium, the proposed algorithm (i) computes the medial axis of coronary artery, (ii) finds the correspondence using the medial axis of coronary artery, and (iii) segments the coronary artery and myocardium. The proposed algorithm provides a robust mathematical linkage between myocardium at risk and supplying coronary arteries so that ischemic myocardial regions can be accurately identified. Hence, both the extent and severity of myocardial ischemia can be quantified effectively, efficiently, and accurately. Furthermore, the constructed mesh model of segmented coronary artery and myocardium can be post-processed for applications such as building optimization models of cardiac systems. The CardiacVis program, which implements the Medial-ABC algorithm, is freely available at Voronoi Diagram Research Center (http://voronoi.hanyang.ac.kr/software/cardiacvis) and will be an invaluable tool for quantitative patient-specific risk stratification in clinical practice.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

MSIP

Samsung Medical Center basic research

Korean Circulation Society Research Fund

Korean Society of Interventional Cardiology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Computational Mathematics,Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design,Human-Computer Interaction,Engineering (miscellaneous),Modeling and Simulation,Computational Mechanics

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