Survivorship practitioners should have heightened awareness for rehabilitation intervention in patients with greater axillary surgery and burden of disease. Patients with more activity restriction and lower levels of function in the early postoperative period may benefit from rehabilitation intervention. Future studies should focus on implementing a screening tool to identify patients in need of rehabilitation referral.
PurposeLymphedema, a swelling of the extremity, is a debilitating morbidity of cancer treatment. Current clinical evaluation of lymphedema is often based on medical history and physical examinations, which is subjective. In this paper, the authors report an objective, quantitative 2D strain imaging approach using a hybrid deformable registration to measure soft-tissue stiffness and assess the severity of lymphedema.
MethodsThe authors have developed a new 2D strain imaging method using registration of pre-and post-compression ultrasound B-mode images, which combines the statistical intensity-and structure-based similarity measures using normalized mutual information (NMI) metric and normalized sum-of-squared-differences (NSSD), with an affine-based global and B-splinebased local transformation model. This 2D strain method was tested through a series of experiments using elastography phantom under various pressures. Clinical feasibility was tested with four participants: two patients with arm lymphedema following breast-cancer radiotherapy and two healthy volunteers.
ResultsThe phantom experiments have shown that the proposed registration-based strain method significantly increased the signal-to-noise and contrast-to-noise ratio under various pressures as compared with the commonly used cross-correlation-based elastography method. In the pilot study, the strain images were successfully generated for all participants. The averaged strain values of the lymphedema affected arms were much higher than those of the normal arms.
ConclusionsThe authors have developed a deformable registration-based 2D strain method for the evaluation of arm lymphedema. The initial findings are encouraging and a large clinical study is warranted to further evaluate this 2D ultrasound strain imaging technology.PLOS ONE | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone
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