Circulation, Vol 77, 415-428, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
JD Thomas, AA Hagege, CY Choong, GT Wilkins, JB Newell and AE Weyman
The usefulness of digitized echocardiographic borders in quantitative
regional left ventricular function analysis has been limited by the wide
reported range for normal wall motion with this technique. We postulated
that random error in endocardial border positioning is a major cause of
this limitation. To test this hypothesis, we traced the endocardial borders
field by field from 17 complete echocardiographic cycles in six dogs. These
cycles showed a great deal of random movement, with each endocardial point
reversing its motion an average of 18.5 times per cardiac cycle.
Spatiotemporal Fourier analysis of these sequences demonstrated that most
of the valid information on endocardial motion was contained in the first
four temporal harmonics and the first seven spatial harmonics and that
beyond these points the Fourier transform has the spectral characteristics
of noise. Reconstruction of these 17 cycles eliminating all Fourier
components above the sixth temporal and eighth spatial harmonics reduced
the mean number of endocardial reversals per cycle to 2.3 (p less than
.00001). To derive the optimal temporal and spatial cutoffs, we compared
reconstructions of each of the 17 cycles with three M mode echocardiograms
obtained simultaneously with the cross-sectional images. Fourier cutoffs
were varied between two and 20 harmonics and demonstrated that the optimal
temporal cutoff was 5.5 harmonics and optimal spatial cutoff 6.9. With
optimal filtering, the correlation between ventricular diameter derived
from the M mode and from the cross- sectional images was r = .965, compared
with .877 for the M mode vs unfiltered cross-sectional data (p less than
.0001). We conclude that two-dimensional filtered Fourier reconstruction
significantly improves the accuracy of traced echocardiographic borders.
This technique should be useful in the postprocessing of endocardial
borders extracted by automated edge detection schemes and should also be
applicable to cardiac images derived from modalities other than
echocardiography.
ARTICLES
Improved accuracy of echocardiographic endocardial borders by spatiotemporal filtered Fourier reconstruction: description of the method and optimization of filter cutoffs
Noninvasive Cardiac Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114.
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