QUICK
FACTS
Dr. Charles DeCarli at The Alzheimers Disease Center at the
University of Kansas uses PV-WAVEs Visual Data Analysis (VDA)
platform. His applications in PV-WAVE became the cornerstone of
a major grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
(NHLBI). The research grant focused on structural brain changes
in healthy, aging patients and patients with Alzheimer's and vascular
diseases. They were able to use PV-WAVE to implement and modify
algorithms and analyze over 400 MRI images.
THE PROBLEM
The Alzheimer's Disease Center at the University of Kansas diagnoses
and provides clinical care to patients with Alzheimer's disease.
In addition, the Center supports and engages in clinical and basic
science research and promotes education related to the disease.
Dr. Charles DeCarli, an associate professor of neurology at the
university and director of the Alzheimer's Disease center, developed
a patented, Fortran-based algorithm for quantifying brain volumes
from magnetic resonance images (MRIs). After discovering Visual
Numeric's PV-WAVE at a National Institute of Health technology fair,
DeCarli shifted his quantification algorithm to PV-WAVE's Visual
Data Analysis (VDA) platform.
The PV-WAVE application of DeCarli's algorithm became the cornerstone
of a $2.7 million grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood
Institute (NHLBI) on "Cerebral Vascular Risk Factors and Brain
Morphology in Twins." The research grant focused on structural
brain changes in healthy, aging patients and patients with Alzheimer's
and vascular diseases.
"This
project is one of the first to document normal changes in brain
regions. We discovered that people don't lose brain tissue evenly,"
said DeCarli. "Our research documented the difference in brain
morphology between men and women, and the effects of estrogen on
the brain. As people age, men lose more brain tissue from the frontal
lobe; women lose more in the parietal lobe and the hippocampus.
These brain patterns are the same with Alzheimer's disease."
THE SOLUTION
DeCarli selected PV-WAVE from Visual Numerics because the tool doesn't
force him to apply visualization matrices in any specific way. "With
PV-WAVE's built in flexibility, I can utilize general purpose functions
and customize my own widgets. PV-WAVE's language is so easy to use,
I can put complicated images together with very little effort,"
he explained.
DeCarli applies statistical analyses to his data for visualization
purposes. "PV-WAVE allows me to remove nonbrain tissue from
an image. I reorient or correct the images so they're homogeneous,"
he said.
In addition, DeCarli customizes PV-WAVE widgets to view mathematical
arrays. Because MRIs add spatial shading, or "noise,"
to images, DeCarli needed to apply a customized mathematical array
to sample images to identify and correct the shading. He accomplished
this by modifying the PV-WAVE Region of Interest (ROI) tool. This
change allowed him to clearly identify brain versus nonbrain regions
within MRIs.
RETURN ON INVESTMENT
"PV-WAVE has enabled me to implement and modify algorithms
and analyze complex data sets easily. My current project involves
over 400 MRI images, which is the largest published quantification
series in this research area to date. PV-WAVE allows me, as a single
user, to update a complicated system easily," said DeCarli.
"PV-WAVE's strength is the ability to easily customize visualization
tools and to create new functions for analyzing data. I can also
produce reports by writing data from PV-WAVE to a comma-delimited
text file, which I import into Microsoft Excel® for further
manipulation and charting."
DeCarli has received telephone calls from researchers from around
the world who have asked how he was able to produce these types
of images. He now collaborates with national and international Alzheimer's
researchers who are also using PV-WAVE on their projects.
DeCarli's technical papers describing the above manipulation of
brain images using his patented algorithms applied through PV-WAVE
have been published in over 12 journals, including the Journal for
Computer Assisted Tomography, the Journal of Magnetic Resonance
Imaging and Neurology magazine.
WORLD CLASS PRODUCTS, SERVICES,
AND SUPPORT
Visual Numerics has provided technical software
solutions for numerical analysis and visualization for over 30 years.
The company's software products help users understand complex data
from a variety of sources and build business-critical applications.
Visual Numerics offers two product lines: the IMSL® Numerical
Libraries for powerful mathematical and statistical analysis and
the PV-WAVE® visual data analysis development environment. Visual
Numerics also offers customized consulting services for applications
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