AUTHOR=Scarpolini Martino Andrea , Mazzoli Marilena , Celi Simona TITLE=Enabling supra-aortic vessels inclusion in statistical shape models of the aorta: a novel non-rigid registration method JOURNAL=Frontiers in Physiology VOLUME=14 YEAR=2023 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/physiology/articles/10.3389/fphys.2023.1211461 DOI=10.3389/fphys.2023.1211461 ISSN=1664-042X ABSTRACT=

Statistical Shape Models (SSMs) are well-established tools for assessing the variability of 3D geometry and for broadening a limited set of shapes. They are widely used in medical imaging due to their ability to model complex geometries and their high efficiency as generative models. The principal step behind these techniques is a registration phase, which, in the case of complex geometries, can be a critical issue due to the correspondence problem, as it necessitates the development of correspondence mapping between shapes. The thoracic aorta, with its high level of morphological complexity, poses a multi-scale deformation problem due to the presence of several branch vessels with varying diameters. Moreover, branch vessels exhibit significant variability in shape, making the correspondence optimization even more challenging. Consequently, existing studies have focused on developing SSMs based only on the main body of the aorta, excluding the supra-aortic vessels from the analysis. In this work, we present a novel non-rigid registration algorithm based on optimizing a differentiable distance function through a modified gradient descent approach. This strategy enables the inclusion of custom, domain-specific constraints in the objective function, which act as landmarks during the registration phase. The algorithm’s registration performance was tested and compared to an alternative Statistical Shape modeling framework, and subsequently used for the development of a comprehensive SSM of the thoracic aorta, including the supra-aortic vessels. The developed SSM was further evaluated against the alternative framework in terms of generalisation, specificity, and compactness to assess its effectiveness.