User:Inorton/Slicer4:DTMRI Thoughts
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Contents
Clinical perspective
We are using Slicer3 for 2-4 Neurosurgery planning cases per week. We have used the Slicer3 FiducialSeeding functionality in the OR (with OpenIGTLink/BioImageSuite/BrainLab driving the seeding location).
Workflow
- Scan and push images to clinical PACS and our clinical fMRI processing workstation (has SCP and dicom db capability)
- Pull/copy images from clinical PACS and processing workstation to research laptop/workstation
- Load all images:
- T1, T2, (sometimes CT, PET, CBV from perfusion MR, etc.)
- 2-4 thresholded fMRI activation volumes (coregistered and resliced to structural in SPM)
- DTI
- Preprocess DTI
- Coregister all images using BrainsFit
- Segment tumor or pathology region
- Bring to clinician to use FiducialSeeding to explore area around tumor.
- (if requested, re-load DICOMs on clinical navigation suite and re-select tracts identified in Slicer)
Background Thoughts
Audiences
- Clinical/research end users: need simple, efficient, relatively intuitive workflow to generate tractography and perform selection and statistics operations.
- Pipeline users: the underlying implementations need to be abstracted sufficiently to allow creation of pipeline tools for large-study purposes.
- Clinical developers: integrate DTI functionality for domain-specific purposes (neurosurgery, neurology, etc.)
- DTI Researchers:
- Could use Slicer+ipython+numpy+... instead of matlab and custom code. Advantages: data-reading and visualization boilerplate code already exists. Challenges: learning curve; the python suite is less integrated than matlab, but it's getting better; relative stability: matlab rarely crashes.
- Implementation of new algorithms in Slicer opens up larger potential userbase.
Slicer advantages
See big list of DTI software here: User:inorton/DTI_Software_List.
There are several excellent DTI-centric applications. What advantages does Slicer have for DTI work?
- More user-friendly data loading: TrackVis requires command line preprocessing; MedInria and TrackVis require manual gradient entry; DTI studio is limited to ROI exploration only (as far as I know)
- Many segmentation options already available - no external tool (TrackVis, DTI Studio) or separate interface (MedInria) required.
- Already integrated with intra-operative systems via OpenIGTLink functionality
- Open-source license (TrackVis closed, MedInria non-commercial, DTI Studio closed)
- DicomToNRRDConverter test suite: validate DICOM loading from many different scanner types, with special emphasis on DTI private header information.
Slicer disadvantages
(this is referring to Slicer3 interactive DTMRI tools: these areas need improvement in Slicer 4)
- Current fiber data model is inefficient for interactive use on large sets (tens of thousands) of fiber tracts.
- Missing good interactive ROI selection, clustering, and editing capability for pre-computed fibersets.
- Need subset selection and coloring.
- Labelmap seeding is not multi-threaded so whole-brain tractography takes forever.
- Disjointed interface: no one-stop integrated GUI for full DICOMs->tracts->measurements workflow.
Existing NA-MIC resources
- teem: the Slicer3 interactive DTI implementation uses teem through the vtkTeem libraries.
- GTRACT: command-line tools for DTI pipeline processing
- UNC DTI Tools (FiberViewer):
Existing open-source external resources
See big list of DTI software here: User:inorton/DTI_Software_List
- (BSD-like licenses)
- DiPy: diffusion imaging in python. Currently pre/alpha but in active development. (BSD license)
- DTI-query and CINCH: (BSD license)