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Abstract #2627

Aortic centreline tracking for PWV measurements in multiple MRI sequences

Arna van Engelen1, Torben Schneider2, Hubrecht de Bliek3, Miguel Silva Vieira4, Isma Rafiq4, Tarique Hussain4, Rene Botnar1, and Jordi Alastruey1

1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, King's College London, London, United Kingdom, 2Philips Healthcare, Guidford, United Kingdom, 3Philips Healthcare, HSDP Clinical Platforms, Best, Netherlands, 4Department of Cardiovascular Imaging, Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, King's College London, London, United Kingdom

Accurate 3D length measurements through the aorta are required for Pulse Wave Velocity (PWV) measurements. We evaluate automatic centreline tracking, requiring only a start and end point, on three different types of MR data (balanced-SSFP, contrast-enhanced and black-blood MRI), in 12 elderly subjects and 10 patients post-coarctation repair. Our algorithm uses vesselness filtering, fast marching and centreline refinement. Length differences between manual and automatic centrelines are generally below 1cm, with corresponding PWV differences well below 0.5m/s. This shows that with minimal user interaction, accurate PWV measurements can be performed using automatic centreline tracking, on commonly used types of MR data.

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