PROJECT TITLE :

Stratification of Patients With Liver Fibrosis Using Dual-Energy CT

ABSTRACT:

Assessing the severity of liver fibrosis has direct clinical implications for patient diagnosis and treatment. Liver biopsy, typically considered the gold standard, has limited clinical utility due to its invasiveness. Therefore, several imaging-based techniques for staging liver fibrosis have emerged, such as magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) and ultrasound elastography (USE), but they face challenges that include limited availability, high cost, poor patient compliance, low repeatability, and inaccuracy. Computed tomography (CT) can address many of these limitations, but is still hampered by inaccuracy in the presence of confounding factors, such as liver fat. Dual-energy CT (DECT), with its ability to discriminate between different tissue types, may offer a viable alternative to these methods. By combining the "multi-material decomposition" (MMD) algorithm with a biologically driven hypothesis we developed a method for assessing liver fibrosis from DECT images. On a twelve-patient cohort the method produced quantitative maps showing the spatial distribution of liver fibrosis, as well as a fibrosis score for each patient with statistically significant correlation with the severity of fibrosis across a wide range of disease severities. A preliminary comparison of the proposed algorithm against MRE showed good agreement between the two methods. Finally, the application of the algorithm to longitudinal DECT scans of the cohort produced highly repeatable results. We conclude that our algorithm can successfully stratify patients with liver fibrosis and can serve to supplement and augment current clinical practice and the role of DECT imaging in staging liver fibrosis.


Did you like this research project?

To get this research project Guidelines, Training and Code... Click Here


PROJECT TITLE : Video Dissemination over Hybrid Cellular and Ad Hoc Networks - 2014 ABSTRACT: We study the problem of disseminating videos to mobile users by using a hybrid cellular and ad hoc network. In particular, we formulate
PROJECT TITLE : Secure and Efficient Data Transmission for Cluster-Based Wireless Sensor Networks - 2014 ABSTRACT: Secure data transmission is a critical issue for wireless sensor networks (WSNs). Clustering is an effective
PROJECT TITLE : PSR A Lightweight Proactive Source Routing Protocol For Mobile Ad Hoc Networks - 2014 ABSTRACT: Opportunistic data forwarding has drawn much attention in the research community of multihop wireless networking,
PROJECT TITLE : Joint Routing and Medium Access Control in Fixed Random Access Wireless Multihop Networks - 2014 ABSTRACT: We study cross-layer design in random-access-based fixed wireless multihop networks under a physical
PROJECT TITLE : Cross-Layer Approach for Minimizing Routing Disruption in IP Networks - 2014 ABSTRACT: Backup paths are widely used in IP networks to protect IP links from failures. However, existing solutions such as the commonly

Ready to Complete Your Academic MTech Project Work In Affordable Price ?

Project Enquiry