Refine
Document Type
- Master's Thesis (11)
- Bachelor Thesis (3)
Language
- English (14) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (14)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (14)
Keywords
- Application (2)
- MRI (2)
- 3D Slicer (1)
- Abstimmung (1)
- Accelerated (1)
- Activity recognition (1)
- Anerkennung (1)
- Anwendung (1)
- Bandscheibenvorfall (1)
- Betreuung (1)
Institute
- Medizinische Informatik (14) (remove)
This thesis presents a photmetric stereo method based on the work of Schulze [35], who in turn extended the research of Schroeder et al. [33,34] In this approach, three different lightings are obtained by illuminating the object by three colored light sources (red, green and blue). A video of the subject is captured from the front, the back and the side. The single frames are then extracted from the viedo, which are used for the 3D reconstruction of the subject. The aim of this work was to improve the presented method of Schulze with real patient subjects by getting a better sphere calibration and changing some parameters in the patient processing. As the graphical interface was implemented for persons with a technical background, it has been changed to become also more convenient to use for non-technically oriented staff
Segmentation of the Cerebrospinal Fluid from MRI Images for the Treatment of Disc Herniations
(2010)
About 80 percent of people are affected at some point in their lives by lower back pain, which is one of the most common neurological diseases and reasons for long-term disability in the United States. The symptoms are primarily caused by overly heavy lifting and/or overstretching of the back, leading to a rupture and an outward bulge of an intervertebral disc, which puts pressure on and pinches the nerve fibers of the spine. The most common form is a lumbar disc herniation between the fourth and fifth lumbar vertebra and between the fifth lumbar vertebra and the sacrum. In recent years the diagnosis of lower back pain has improved, mainly due to enhanced imaging techniques and imaging quality, but the surgical therapy remains hazardous. Reasons for this include low visibility when accessing the lumbar area and the high risk of causing permanent damage when touching the nerve fibers. A new approach for increasing patient safety is the segmentation and visualization of the cerebrospinal fluid in the lower lumbar region of the vertebral column. For this purpose a new fully-automatic and a semi-automatic approach were developed for separating the cerebrospinal fluid from its surroundings on T2-weighted MRI scans of the lumbar vertebra. While the fully-automatic algorithm is realized by a model-based searching method and a volume-based segmentation, the semi-automatic algorithm requires a seed point and performs the segmentation on individual axial planes through a combination of a region-based segmentation algorithm and a thresholding filter. Both algorithms have been applied to four T2-weighted MRI datasets and are compared with a gold-standard segmentation. The segmentation overlap with the gold-standard was 78.7 percent for the fully-automatic algorithm and 93.1 percent for the semi-automatic algorithm. In the pathological region the fully-automatic algorithm obtained a similarity of 56.6 percent, compared to 87.8 percent for the semi-automatic algorithm.
Quantitative assessment of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging can be used for diagnosis and staging of tumors and monitoring of response in cancer treatment. In clinical practice, PET analysis is based on normalized indices such as those based on the Standardized Uptake Value (SUV). Although largely evaluated, these indices are considered quite unstable mainly because of the simplicity of their experimental protocol. Development and validation of more sophisticated methods for the purposes of clinical research require a common open platform that can be used both for prototyping and sharing of the analysis methods, and for their evaluation by clinical users. This work was motivated by the lack of such platform for longitudinal quantitative PET analysis. By following a prototype driven software development approach, an open source tool for quantitative analysis of tumor changes based on multi-study PET image data has been implemented. As a platform for this work, 3D Slicer 4, a free open source software application for medical image computing has been chosen. For the analysis and quantification of PET data, the implemented software tool guides the user through a series of workflow steps. In addition to the implementation of a guided workflow, the software was made extensible by integration of interfaces for the enhancement of segmentation and PET quantification algorithms. By offering extensibility, the PET analysis software tool was transformed into a platform suitable for prototyping and development of PET-specific segmentation and quantification methods. The accuracy, efficiency and usability of the platform were evaluated in reproducibility and usability studies. The results achieved in these studies demonstrate that the implemented longitudinal PET analysis software tool fulfills all requirements for the basic quantification of tumors in PET imaging and at the same time provides an efficient and easy to use workflow. Furthermore, it can function as a platform for prototyping of PET-specific segmentation and quantification methods, which in the future can be incorporated in the workflow.
In this thesis a software system is proposed that provides transparent access to dynamically processed data using a synthetic filesystem for the data transfer as well as interaction with the processing pipeline. Within this context the architecture for such a software solution has been designed and implemented. Using this implementation various profiling measurements have been acquired in order to evaluate the applicability in different data processing scenarios. Usability aspects, considering the interaction with the processing pipeline, have been examined as well. The implemented software is able to generate the processing result on-the-fly without modification of the original input data. Access to the output data is provided by means of a common filesystem interface without the need of implementing yet another communication protocol. Within the processing pipeline the data can be accessed and modified independently from the actual input and output encoding. Currently the data can be modified using a C/C++, GLSL or Java front end. Profiling data has shown that the overhead induced by the filesystem is negligible for most usage patterns and is only critical for realtime processing with a high data throughput e. g. video processing at or above 30 frames per second where typically no file operations are involved.
The Greifswald University Hospital in Germany conducts a research project called "Greifswald Approach to Individualized Medicine (GANI_MED)", which aims at improving patient care through personalized medicine. As a result of this project, there are multiple regional patient cohorts set up for different common diseases. The collected data of these cohorts will act as a resource for epidemiological research. Researchers are going to get the possibility to use this data for their study, by utilizing a variety of different descriptive metadata attributes. The actual medical datasets of the patients are integrated from multiple clinical information systems and medical devices. Yet, at this point in the process of defining a research query, researchers do not have proper tools to query for existing patient data. There are no tools available which offer a metadata catalogue that is linked to observational data, which would allow convenient research. Instead, researchers have to issue an application for selected variables that fit the conditions of their study, and wait for the results. That leaves the researchers not knowing in advance, whether there are enough (or any) patients fitting the specified inclusion and exclusion criteria. The "Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside (i2b2)" framework has been assessed and implemented as a prototypical evaluation instance for solving this issue. i2b2 will be set up at the Institute for Community Medicine (ICM) at Greifswald, in order to act as a preliminary query tool for researchers. As a result, the development of a research data import routine and customizations of the i2b2 webclient were successfully performed. An important part of the solution is, that the metadata import can adapt to changes in the metadata. New metadata items can be added without changing the import program. The results of this work are discussed and a further outlook is described in this thesis.
Medication reconciliation is defined by the American Society of Health- System Pharmacists (ASHP) and the American Pharmacists Association (AphA) as “the comprehensive evaluation of a patient’s medication regimen any time there is a change in therapy in an effort to avoid medication errors such as omissions, duplications, dosing errors or drug interactions, as well as to observe compliance and adherence patterns “. Medication reconciliation is very important to avoid medication errors but it is also a complex and time-consuming process. Medication histories, i.e. records of prescription, purchase, and refill sequences are considered to be a resource from which conclusions about medication reconciliation can be drawn. However, medication histories spread across diverse paper and electronic media may lack the required accuracy. By employing multiple electronic sources this thesis will evaluate if more accurate medication histories can be collected.
Cytoscape is an open source platform for complex network analysis and visualisation. The Pathway Interaction Database (PID) is a highly structured, curated collection of information about known biomolecular interactions and key cellular processes assembled into signalling pathways. Despite the obvious potential and advantageous usage of both tool (Cytoscape) and information source (PID), there has been no conclusive effort to merge and synergise them. This project aims to make use of the open source characteristics of Cytoscape and optimally visualise the biomolecular interactions found in the PID. This is made possible by the development of a plugin which imports a user-selected pathway file, converts it into a Cytoscape-readable file, and then visualises it. Finally, the user has options to further optimise the pathway by the use of a filter (Barcode – Affymetrix) that removes nodes from the network which are lowly expressed in the Affymetrix microarray data. The user then obtains visual results in a matter of seconds. Additionally, the process of subgraphing nodes through the shortest path method could be applied to the network. This can further assist the user in identifying the molecular pathways of the nodes of interest, a useful feature in network analysis.
Ambulant studies are dependent on the behavior and compliance of subjects in their home environment. Especially during interventions on the musculoskeletal system, monitoring physical activity is essential, even for research on nutritional, metabolic, or neuromuscular issues. To support an ambulant study at the German Aerospace Center (DLR), a pattern recognition system for human activity was developed. Everyday activi-ties of static (standing, sitting, lying) and dynamic nature (walking, ascending stairs, descending stairs, jogging) were under consideration. Two tri-axial accelerometers were attached to the hip and parallel to the tibia. Pattern characterizing features from the time domain (mean, standard deviation, absolute maximum) and the frequency domain (main frequencies, spectral entropy, autoregressive coefficients, signal magni-tude area) were extracted. Artificial neural networks (ANN) with a feedforward topology were trained with backpropagation as supervised learning algorithm. An evaluation of the resulting classifier was conducted with 14 subjects completing an activity protocol and a free chosen course of activities. An individual ANN was trained for each subject. Accuracies of 87,99 % and 71,23 % were approached in classifying the activity protocol and the free run, respectively. Reliabilities of 96,49 % and 76,77 % were measured. These performance parameters represent a working ambulant physical activity monitor-ing system.
Sudden cardiac arrest is a leading cause of death world wide, with about 100.000 to 150.000 cases each year in Germany alone [Weidringer and Sefrin, 2006]. This means that annually one out of 1000 citizens are affected [Bahr, 2007]. At standard conditions the human brain has a relative low ischemic1 tolerance. Therefore after 3 - 5 minutes without therapy, irreversible damage is to be expected. The rate of survival drops 7% - 10% each minute, without resuscitation [Bahr, 2007]. Since the arrival of the organized emergency medical service usually takes more than 5 minutes after the emergency call [Wahlen et al., 2003, Weisfeldt et al., 2010], the instant and adequate resuscitation by bystanders in this period is of vital importance. The advantage of basic life support2 (BLS) by laymen shows a fourfold higher rate of survival, once resuscitation has begun, until the arrival of the emergency medical service [Bahr, 2007].
Background: An important factor in approaching the challenges of chronic diseases, requiring long-term management and high costs, is the active participation of the patient in the care process. Objectives: Facing the problem of lacking patient-tailored, comprehensive health management software, the aim of this thesis is to generate ideas for a graphical user interface (GUI) to support stroke patients in the management of their individual care process. The objectives are to prototype a GUI for a patient e-service and to evaluate its usefulness and usability with stroke patients. Methods: A scenario-based, user-centered design method was used to envision ideas for the user interface. Static prototypes were realized with the tool Pencil and for the implementation of a dynamic prototype web programming techniques were used. For the evaluation of the prototypes the methods of focus group discussion and cooperative evaluation were applied. Results: The situation of a representative stroke patient and his interaction with the e-service were described in scenarios. Graphical user interfaces of the involved system views were derived from the scenarios and illustrated with static wireframe prototypes. A welcome screen, a care process timeline overview, and a diary with data sharing functionality were designed. The diary functionality was further examined by implementing a prototypical web application. During the evaluation, feedback for further improvements was gathered, and assumptions about the user information and functionality needs could be verified. Conclusion: The developed prototypes represent a suitable graphical user interface and visualizations to support stroke patients in the management of their care process. An overview of appointments on the welcome screen, a diary to document and monitor health, a timeline overview of all time-related health information and a selected sharing functionality were found to be important features of a personal health system for stroke patients.