Kainz B, Reiter U, Reiter G, Schmalstieg D (2009)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2009
Book Volume: 25
Pages Range: 853-862
Journal Issue: 9
DOI: 10.1007/s00371-009-0315-7
In this paper we give an overview over a series of experiments to visualize and measure flow fields in the human vascular system with respect to their diagnostic capabilities. The experiments utilize a selection of GPU-based sparse and dense flow visualization algorithms to show the diagnostic opportunities for volumetric cardiovascular phase contrast magnetic resonance imaging data sets. Besides classical hardware accelerated particle and line-based approaches, an extensible tublet-based visualization, a four-dimensional volumetric line integral convolution and a new two-dimensional cutting plane tool for three-dimensional velocity data sets have been implemented. To evaluate the results, several hearts of human subjects have been investigated and a flow phantom was built to artificially simulate distinctive flow features. Our results demonstrate that we are able to provide an interactive tool for cardiovascular diagnostics with complementary hardware accelerated visualizations. © 2009 Springer-Verlag.
APA:
Kainz, B., Reiter, U., Reiter, G., & Schmalstieg, D. (2009). In vivo interactive visualization of four-dimensional blood flow patterns : RRRealtime assessment of volumetric phase contrast MRI. Visual Computer, 25(9), 853-862. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00371-009-0315-7
MLA:
Kainz, Bernhard, et al. "In vivo interactive visualization of four-dimensional blood flow patterns : RRRealtime assessment of volumetric phase contrast MRI." Visual Computer 25.9 (2009): 853-862.
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