MulViMotion: Shape-Aware 3D Myocardial Motion Tracking From Multi-View Cardiac MRI

Recovering the 3D motion of the heart from cine cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging enables the assessment of regional myocardial function and is important for understanding and analyzing cardiovascular disease. However, 3D cardiac motion estimation is challenging because the acquired cine CMR...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on medical imaging Vol. 41; no. 8; pp. 1961 - 1974
Main Authors Meng, Qingjie, Qin, Chen, Bai, Wenjia, Liu, Tianrui, de Marvao, Antonio, O'Regan, Declan P, Rueckert, Daniel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States IEEE 01.08.2022
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
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ISSN0278-0062
1558-254X
1558-254X
DOI10.1109/TMI.2022.3154599

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Summary:Recovering the 3D motion of the heart from cine cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging enables the assessment of regional myocardial function and is important for understanding and analyzing cardiovascular disease. However, 3D cardiac motion estimation is challenging because the acquired cine CMR images are usually 2D slices which limit the accurate estimation of through-plane motion. To address this problem, we propose a novel multi-view motion estimation network (MulViMotion), which integrates 2D cine CMR images acquired in short-axis and long-axis planes to learn a consistent 3D motion field of the heart. In the proposed method, a hybrid 2D/3D network is built to generate dense 3D motion fields by learning fused representations from multi-view images. To ensure that the motion estimation is consistent in 3D, a shape regularization module is introduced during training, where shape information from multi-view images is exploited to provide weak supervision to 3D motion estimation. We extensively evaluate the proposed method on 2D cine CMR images from 580 subjects of the UK Biobank study for 3D motion tracking of the left ventricular myocardium. Experimental results show that the proposed method quantitatively and qualitatively outperforms competing methods.
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ISSN:0278-0062
1558-254X
1558-254X
DOI:10.1109/TMI.2022.3154599