Various specialized and general collimators are used for myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) with single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) to assess different types of coronary artery disease (CAD). Alongside the wide variability in imaging characteristics, the apriori “learnt” information of left ventricular (LV) shape can affect the final diagnosis of the imaging protocol. This study evaluates the effect of prior information incorporation into the segmentation process, compared to deep learning (DL) approaches, as well as the differences of 4 collimation techniques on 5 different datasets. This study was implemented on 80 patients database. 40 patients were coming from mixed black-box collimators, 10 each, from multi-pinhole (MPH), low energy high resolution (LEHR), CardioC and CardioD collimators. The testing was evaluated on a new continuous graph-based approach, which automatically segments the left ventricular volume with prior information on the cardiac geometry. The technique is based on the continuous max-flow (CMF) min-cut algorithm, which performance was evaluated in precision, recall, IoU and Dice score metrics. In the testing it was shown that, the developed method showed a good improvement over deep learning reaching higher scores in most of the evaluation metrics. Further investigating the different collimation techniques, the evaluation of receiver operating characterstic (ROC) curves showed different stabilities on the various collimators. Running Wilcoxon signed-rank test on the outlines of the LVs showed differentiability between the collimation procedures. To further investigate these phenomena the model parameters of the LVs were reconstructed and evaluated by the uniform manifold approximation and projection (UMAP) method, which further proved that collimators can be differentiated based on the projected LV shapes alone. The results show that prior information incorporation can enhance the performance of segmentation methods and collimation strategies have a high effect on the projected cardiac geometry.
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- Myocardial perfusion imaging SPECT left ventricle segmentation with graphs