Anoop Shah

2papers

2 Papers

IVSep 3, 2024
Explicit Differentiable Slicing and Global Deformation for Cardiac Mesh Reconstruction

Yihao Luo, Dario Sesia, Fanwen Wang et al.

Mesh reconstruction of the cardiac anatomy from medical images is useful for shape and motion measurements and biophysics simulations to facilitate the assessment of cardiac function and health. However, 3D medical images are often acquired as 2D slices that are sparsely sampled and noisy, and mesh reconstruction on such data is a challenging task. Traditional voxel-based approaches rely on pre- and post-processing that compromises image fidelity, while mesh-level deep learning approaches require mesh annotations that are difficult to get. Therefore, direct cross-domain supervision from 2D images to meshes is a key technique for advancing 3D learning in medical imaging, but it has not been well-developed. While there have been attempts to approximate the optimized meshes' slicing, few existing methods directly use 2D slices to supervise mesh reconstruction in a differentiable manner. Here, we propose a novel explicit differentiable voxelization and slicing (DVS) algorithm that allows gradient backpropagation to a mesh from its slices, facilitating refined mesh optimization directly supervised by the losses defined on 2D images. Further, we propose an innovative framework for extracting patient-specific left ventricle (LV) meshes from medical images by coupling DVS with a graph harmonic deformation (GHD) mesh morphing descriptor of cardiac shape that naturally preserves mesh quality and smoothness during optimization. Experimental results demonstrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance in cardiac mesh reconstruction tasks from CT and MRI, with an overall Dice score of 90% on multi-datasets, outperforming existing approaches. The proposed method can further quantify clinically useful parameters such as ejection fraction and global myocardial strains, closely matching the ground truth and surpassing the traditional voxel-based approach in sparse images.

IRAug 15, 2021
Deployment of a Free-Text Analytics Platform at a UK National Health Service Research Hospital: CogStack at University College London Hospitals

Kawsar Noor, Lukasz Roguski, Alex Handy et al.

As more healthcare organisations transition to using electronic health record (EHR) systems it is important for these organisations to maximise the secondary use of their data to support service improvement and clinical research. These organisations will find it challenging to have systems which can mine information from the unstructured data fields in the record (clinical notes, letters etc) and more practically have such systems interact with all of the hospitals data systems (legacy and current). To tackle this problem at University College London Hospitals, we have deployed an enhanced version of the CogStack platform; an information retrieval platform with natural language processing capabilities which we have configured to process the hospital's existing and legacy records. The platform has improved data ingestion capabilities as well as better tools for natural language processing. To date we have processed over 18 million records and the insights produced from CogStack have informed a number of clinical research use cases at the hospitals.