Introduction: Myriad disorders cause right ventricular (RV) dilation and lead to tricuspid regurgitation (TR). Because the thin-walled, flexible RV is mechanically coupled to the pulmonary circulation and the left ventricular septum, it distorts with any disturbance in the cardiopulmonary system. TR, therefore, can result from pulmonary hypertension, left heart failure, or intrinsic RV dysfunction; but once it occurs, TR initiates a cycle of worsening RV volume overload, potentially progressing to right heart failure. Characteristic three-dimensional RV shape-changes from this process, and changes particular to individual TR causes, have not been defined in detail.Methods: Cardiac MRI was obtained in 6 healthy volunteers, 41 patients with ≥ moderate TR, and 31 control patients with cardiac disease without TR. The mean shape of each group was constructed using a three-dimensional statistical shape model via the particle-based shape modeling approach. Changes in shape were examined across pulmonary hypertension and congestive heart failure subgroups using principal component analysis (PCA). A logistic regression approach based on these PCA modes identified patients with TR using RV shape alone.Results: Mean RV shape in patients with TR exhibited free wall bulging, narrowing of the base, and blunting of the RV apex compared to controls (p<0.05). Using four primary PCA modes, a logistic regression algorithm identified patients with TR correctly with 82% recall and 87% precision. In patients with pulmonary hypertension without TR, RV shape was narrower and more streamlined than in healthy volunteers. However, in RVs with TR and pulmonary hypertension, overall RV shape continued to demonstrate the free wall bulging characteristic of TR. In the subgroup of patients with congestive heart failure without TR, this intermediate state of RV muscular hypertrophy was not present.Conclusion: The multiple causes of TR examined in this study changed RV shape in similar ways. Logistic regression classification based on these shape changes reliably identified patients with TR regardless of etiology. Furthermore, pulmonary hypertension without TR had unique shape features, described here as the “well compensated” RV. These results suggest shape modeling as a promising tool for defining severity of RV disease and risk of decompensation, particularly in patients with pulmonary hypertension.
Introduction: Statistical shape modeling (SSM) is a valuable and powerful tool to generate a detailed representation of complex anatomy that enables quantitative analysis of shapes and their variations. SSM applies mathematics, statistics, and computing to parse the shape into some quantitative representation (such as correspondence points or landmarks) which can be used to study the covariance patterns of the shapes and answer various questions about the anatomical variations across the population. Complex anatomical structures have many diverse parts with varying interactions or intricate architecture. For example, the heart is a four-chambered organ with several shared boundaries between chambers. Subtle shape changes within the shared boundaries of the heart can indicate potential pathologic changes such as right ventricular overload. Early detection and robust quantification could provide insight into ideal treatment techniques and intervention timing. However, existing SSM methods do not explicitly handle shared boundaries which aid in a better understanding of the anatomy of interest. If shared boundaries are not explicitly modeled, it restricts the capability of the shape model to identify the pathological shape changes occurring at the shared boundary. Hence, this paper presents a general and flexible data-driven approach for building statistical shape models of multi-organ anatomies with shared boundaries that explicitly model contact surfaces.Methods: This work focuses on particle-based shape modeling (PSM), a state-of-art SSM approach for building shape models by optimizing the position of correspondence particles. The proposed PSM strategy for handling shared boundaries entails (a) detecting and extracting the shared boundary surface and contour (outline of the surface mesh/isoline) of the meshes of the two organs, (b) followed by a formulation for a correspondence-based optimization algorithm to build a multi-organ anatomy statistical shape model that captures morphological and alignment changes of individual organs and their shared boundary surfaces throughout the population.Results: We demonstrate the shared boundary pipeline using a toy dataset of parameterized shapes and a clinical dataset of the biventricular heart models. The shared boundary model for the cardiac biventricular data achieves consistent parameterization of the shared surface (interventricular septum) and identifies the curvature of the interventricular septum as pathological shape differences.
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