98%
921
2 minutes
20
Purpose: Percutaneous image-guided interventions are commonly used for the diagnosis and treatment of cancer. In practice, physiological breathing-induced motion increases the difficulty of accurately inserting needles into tumors without impairing the surrounding vital structures. In this work, we propose a data-driven patient-specific hierarchical respiratory motion estimation framework to accurately estimate the position of a tumor and surrounding vital tissues in real time.
Methods: The motion of optical markers attached to the chest or abdomen skin is used as a surrogate signal to estimate tumor motion based on ɛ-support vector regression (ɛ-SVR). With the estimated tumor motion as the input, a novel respiratory motion model is developed to estimate the diffeomorphic deformation field of the whole organ (liver or lung) without intraoperative, iterative optimization computations. The respiratory motion model of the whole organ is established in Lie algebra space based on the kriging algorithm to ensure that the estimated deformation field is diffeomorphic, optimal, and unbiased. Preoperative prior knowledge for modeling the motion of whole organs is obtained by deformation registration between four-dimensional computed tomography (4D CT) images using a hybrid diffeomorphic registration method.
Results And Conclusions: Experimental results on an in vivo beagle dog show that the minimum value of the determinant of the Jacobian of the estimated deformation field is greater than zero, so the estimated deformation field of the whole liver with our method is diffeomorphic. The mean position error of the tumor is 1.2 mm corresponding to a mean accuracy improvement of 76.5%, and the mean position error of the whole liver is 2.1 mm, corresponding to a mean accuracy improvement of 37.9%. The experimental results based on public human subject data show that the mean position error of the tumor is 1.1 mm, corresponding to a mean accuracy improvement of 83.1%, and the mean position error of the whole lung is 2.1 mm, corresponding to a mean accuracy improvement of 41.4%. The positioning errors for the tumor and whole organ are hierarchical and consistent with clinical demand.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mp.15008 | DOI Listing |
Cancer Pathog Ther
September 2025
Department of Radiation Oncology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27708, United States.
Background: Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) is an effective treatment for early-stage non-small cell lung cancer. However, patient breathing can affect treatment accuracy. Therefore, this study aimed to develop a bi-polar (BP) gated motion management strategy for SBRT and evaluate its feasibility geometrically and dosimetrically.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Magn Reson Imaging
September 2025
Department of Neurology, Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA.
Background: Cerebrovascular reactivity reflects changes in cerebral blood flow in response to an acute stimulus and is reflective of the brain's ability to match blood flow to demand. Functional MRI with a breath-hold task can be used to elicit this vasoactive response, but data validity hinges on subject compliance. Determining breath-hold compliance often requires external monitoring equipment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Med
September 2025
Department of Radiology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Purpose: Supine breast MRI has the potential to improve over standard prone breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in terms of efficiency and image quality, image alignment with diagnostic and treatment procedures, and overall accessibility. This study aims to characterize potential technical challenges of imaging in the supine position: (i) field inhomogeneities, (ii) variations, (iii) respiratory-induced breast motion, and (iv) supine breast geometry.
Methods: Ten healthy subjects were scanned at 3T in both prone and supine positions to quantify and compare (i) and (ii) between both positions, and to assess (iii) in the supine position.
Radiol Phys Technol
September 2025
Radiation and Proton Therapy Center, Shizuoka Cancer Center, 1007 Shimonagakubo, Nagaizumi-Cho, Shizuoka, 411-8777, Japan.
In therapy with Synchrony® mounted on Radixact®, the fiducial marker (FM) and adrenal gland metastasis, which shift with respiratory phase, require margin compensation for high-dose prescriptions. Although compensation is critical, no studies have examined the margin to compensate for the respiratory phase shift. Therefore, we aimed to suggest the compensating margin for the FM and adrenal metastasis shift along with respiratory phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
September 2025
Department of Electronics and Bioinformatics, School of Science and Technology, Meiji University, Kanagawa, Japan.
Muscle metaboreflex is activated in limb skeletal muscles during high-intensity exercise that increases respiratory demand, but its effects on respiratory muscle blood flow remain unknown. Therefore, we investigated whether metaboreflex activation in the forearm alters blood flow in the intercostal muscles. Sixteen healthy young male subjects performed isometric handgrip at 30% of maximal voluntary contraction for 2 minutes, followed by either post-exercise muscle ischemia (PEMI; metaboreflex activation condition) or a control recovery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF