An Australian scientist has evolved a mathematical model to arrive at an accurate measurement of different brain tissues from MRI scan imagery.
An Australian scientist has evolved a mathematical model to arrive at an accurate measurement of different brain tissues from MRI scan imagery. Associate Professor Alan Liew from the School of Information, Communication Technology at the Griffith University, has been working on computational algorithms which are important in the clinical diagnosis of brain conditions such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Disease.
Using this mathematical model, an MRI scanner can be used to accurately segment and measure different tissue classes. The data can then be used by a clinician as a diagnostic tool to compare the brain tissue of healthy patients.
"These computations will allow the accurate quantitative measurement of tissue volume, such as the brain's grey matter which is important for memory and other cognitive processes and is relevant to conditions including Alzheimer's," Associate Professor Liew said.
Currently there is no way for a clinician to accurately obtain this information from an MRI scanning device.
"By using these algorithms, the clinician will be able to obtain quantitative measurements that can help both predict and monitor the rate of potential disease progression in designated increments."
Although the technique has not yet been perfected and is currently undergoing further refinement, Associate Professor Liew said the ability for clinicians to use the technology in hospitals as a diagnostic tool is potentially only a few years away.
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Preliminary research into this area has also shown that the computational modelling can be used to study MRI scans which can ascertain the brain tissue differences present in people with sleep disorders.
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Source-Medindia