Publication | Open Access
Adapted Surface Visualization of Cerebral Aneurysms with Embedded Blood Flow Information
40
Citations
24
References
2010
Year
EngineeringBiomedical EngineeringNeurovascular DiseaseBlood FlowVisual ComputingNeurologyBlood Flow MeasurementRadiologyGeometric ModelingVascular ImageMedical ImagingVisual ExplorationExpressive RenderingDesignNeuroimagingAneurysm SurfaceCerebral Blood FlowMedical Image ComputingBiomedical FlowVolume RenderingNon-photorealistic RenderingCerebral AneurysmsAdapted Surface VisualizationBiomedical ImagingNeuroscienceMedicine
Cerebral aneurysms are a vascular dilatation induced by a pathological change of the vessel wall and often require treatment to avoid rupture. Therefore, it is of main interest, to estimate the risk of rupture, to gain a deeper understanding of aneurysm genesis, and to plan an actual intervention, the surface morphology and the internal blood flow characteristics. Visual exploration is primarily used to understand such complex and variable type of data. Since the blood flow data is strongly influenced by the surrounding vessel morphology both have to be visually combined to efficiently support visual exploration. Since the flow is spatially embedded in the surrounding aneurysm surface, occlusion problems have to be tackled. Thereby, a meaningful visual reduction of the aneurysm surface that still provides morphological hints is necessary. We accomplish this by applying an adapted illustrative rendering style to the aneurysm surface. Our contribution lies in the combination and adaption of several rendering styles, which allow us to reduce the problem of occlusion and avoid most of the disadvantages of the traditional semi-transparent surface rendering, like ambiguities in perception of spatial relationships. In interviews with domain experts, we derived visual requirements. Later, we conducted an initial survey with 40 participants (13 medical experts of them), which leads to further improvements of our approach.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1