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Pre- and postoperative MR brain imaging with automatic planning and scanning software in tumor patients: An intraindividual comparative study at 3 Tesla

✍ Scribed by Michael Nelles; Juergen Gieseke; Horst Urbach; Renate Semrau; Daniel Bystrov; Hans H. Schild; Winfried A. Willinek


Book ID
102376401
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
427 KB
Volume
30
Category
Article
ISSN
1053-1807

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Purpose

To evaluate the feasibility of automatic planning and scanning of brain MR imaging (MRI) protocols on a clinical 3 Tesla system in tumor patients before and after neurosurgical intervention.

Materials and Methods

Twenty‐nine patients with intra‐axial lesions were examined with automated planscan software pre‐ and postoperatively. MR section geometries were determined using intensity‐based three‐dimensional registration and an extraction of landmarks. The technique involved an active shape model to match the boundaries of anatomical structures and typical shape variations. Insufficient geometries were corrected manually by a trained operator.

Results

In 29/29 of the preoperative and 47/58 MRI sessions in total, no manual interaction was necessary. Predominantly minor corrections were necessary in 11/29 postoperative sessions, with critical corrections (≥ 3‐mm offcenter change or ≥ 5° in alignment of the stacks) in 3/58 sessions. Mean offcenter correction was 1.41 mm (range, 0–7.33 mm), mean angle change toward the midline or commissural line was 1.43° (range, 0–8.05°).

Conclusion

Automatic planning and scanning before and after brain surgery yields robust results in most of the patients with substantial shape deviations. The dimensions of necessary geometry corrections are predominantly small. These results are promising to minimize interscan variability in longitudinal studies. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2009;30:672–677. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.