Stroke, Vol 12, 22-26, Copyright © 1981 by American Heart Association
JK Farrar
A technique is described by which the sizes, shape and orientation of the
brain with respect to detector positioning can be reproduced by
computerized simulation. Head size is estimated from the distance between
the external acoustic meatus (EAM) and the outer canthus and head shape is
determined from the length and height of the skull. These values are used
to magnify and alter the shape of a standard brain outline to comply with
individual patient measurements. The location of the EAM and nasion are
used to establish the displacement and rotation of the orbito-meatal base
line with respect to the detector holding assembly. The corrected brain
outline is then rotated, centered and displayed superimposed on the
regional flow data. Comparison of flow data from 2 studies is accomplished
by mapping each probe location onto the standard brain and projecting these
brain coordinates onto the second study. Flow data from the nearest
detectors are averaged to obtain the interpolated flow value for that brain
region. This method corrects for differences in head size and shape between
patients and for changes in head positioning and rotation between studies.
Computer simulation studies demonstrated that this correction procedure can
significantly reduce the variance of flow measurements for expected ranges
of head size and orientation.
ARTICLES
A computerized technique for the display and comparison of regional cerebral blood flow data
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