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Phantom-Based Ultrasound-ECG Deep Learning Framework for Prospective Cardiac Computed Tomography
Author(s) -
Shambavi Ganesh,
Brooks D. Lindsey,
Srini Tridandapani,
Pamela T. Bhatti
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
ieee transactions on biomedical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Magazines
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.148
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1558-2531
pISSN - 0018-9294
DOI - 10.1109/tbme.2025.3575268
Subject(s) - bioengineering , computing and processing , components, circuits, devices and systems , communication, networking and broadcast technologies
Objective: We present the first multimodal deep learning framework combining ultrasound (US) and electrocardiography (ECG) data to predict cardiac quiescent periods (QPs) for optimized computed tomography angiography gating (CTA). Methods: The framework integrates a 3D convolutional neural network (CNN) for US data and an artificial neural network (ANN) for ECG data. A dynamic heart motion phantom, replicating diverse cardiac conditions, including arrhythmias, was used to validate the framework. Performance was assessed across varying QP lengths, cardiac segments, and motions to simulate real-world conditions. Results: The multimodal US-ECG 3D CNN-ANN framework demonstrated improved QP prediction accuracy compared to single-modality ECG-only gating, achieving 96.87% accuracy compared to 85.56%, including scenarios involving arrhythmic conditions. Notably, the framework shows higher accuracy for longer QP durations (100 ms - 200 ms) compared to shorter durations (<100ms), while still outperforming single-modality methods, which often fail to detect shorter quiescent phases, especially in arrhythmic cases. Consistently outperforming single-modality approaches, it achieves reliable QP prediction across cardiac regions, including the whole phantom, interventricular septum, and cardiac wall regions. Analysis of QP prediction accuracy across cardiac segments demonstrated an average accuracy of 92% in clinically relevant echocardiographic views, highlighting the framework's robustness. Conclusion: Combining US and ECG data using a multimodal framework improves QP prediction accuracy under variable cardiac motion, particularly in arrhythmic conditions. Significance: Since even small errors in cardiac CTA can result in non-diagnostic scans, the potential benefits of multimodal gating may improve diagnostic scan rates in patients with high and variable heart rates and arrhythmias.

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