A novel retrospective gating method for intracoronary ultrasound images based on image properties
Computers in cardiology: 13-16
Article 2003 English
Authors
SW
S.A. de Winter
RH
Ronald Hamers
MD
Muzaffer Değertekin
Abstract
1 min read
Intracoronary ultrasound (ICUS) provides high-resolution tomographic images of selected segments of coronary arteries. Series of cross-sectional images are acquired with motorized pullback imaging catheters and used for quantitative analysis in intracoronary ultrasound studies (ICUS). Due to catheter displacement in the vascular lumen during the cardiac cycle the images that are typically acquired at 0.5 mm/s are anatomically shuffled. This results in a saw-tooth shaped appearance of the coronary segment in longitudinal reconstructed views (L-views) used frequently in quantitative coronary ultrasound (QCU) software. This paper describes a novel image-based gating method called "Intelligate", which overcomes this problem by automatic retrospective selection of end-diastolic frames from pre-recorded ICUS studies. Our evaluation shows that there are no quantitative differences between analysis results of hardware ECG-gated and intelligated ICUS studies.
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Masato Otsuka, Nico Bruining, Niels C van Pelt, Nico R. Mollet, Jürgen Ligthart, Eleni C. Vourvouri, Ronald Hamers, Peter de Jaegere, William Wijns, Ron T. van Domburg, Gregg W. Stone, Susan Veldhof, Stefan Verheye, Dariusz Dudek, Patrick W. Serruys, Gabriël P. Krestin, Pim J. de Feyter
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