Subject-Specific Longitudinal Shape Analysis by Coupling Spatiotemporal Shape Modeling with Medial Analysis

Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng. 2017 Apr:10133:101331A. doi: 10.1117/12.2254675.

Abstract

Modeling subject-specific shape change is one of the most important challenges in longitudinal shape analysis of disease progression. Whereas anatomical change over time can be a function of normal aging; anatomy can also be impacted by disease related degeneration. Shape changes to anatomy may also be affected by external structural changes from neighboring structures, which may cause non-linear pose variations. In this paper, we propose a framework to analyze disease related shape changes by coupling extrinsic modeling of the ambient anatomical space via spatiotemporal deformations with intrinsic shape properties from medial surface analysis. We compare intrinsic shape properties of a subject-specific shape trajectory to a normative 4D shape atlas representing normal aging to separately quantify shape changes related to disease. The spatiotemporal shape modeling establishes inter/intra subject anatomical correspondence, which in turn enables comparisons between subjects and the 4D shape atlas, and also quantitative analysis of disease related shape change. The medial surface analysis captures intrinsic shape properties related to local patterns of deformation. The proposed framework simultaneously models extrinsic longitudinal shape changes in the ambient anatomical space, as well as intrinsic shape properties to give localized measurements of degeneration. Six high risk subjects and six controls are randomly sampled from a Huntington's disease image database for quantitative and qualitative comparison.