
Special Issue on Imaging and the Virtual Physiological Human
Alejandro F. Frangi, Bart Bijnens, Rod
Hose, Peter J. Hunter
Guest Editors
According to the STEP research roadmap (http://www.europhysiome.org)
the Virtual Physiological Human (VPH) is a methodological and technological
framework that once established will enable the investigation of the human body
as a single complex system. Underlying the VPH concept, the International
Union for Physiological Sciences (IUPS) has been sponsoring for more than a
decade now the IUPS Physiome Project (www.physiome.org.nz),
which is a worldwide public domain effort to provide a computational
framework for understanding human physiology. It aims to develop integrative
models at all levels of biological organization, from genes to the whole
organism via gene regulatory networks, protein pathways, integrative cell
function, and tissue and whole organ structure/function relations.
In this context, the roles of medical imaging and image
computing play, and will continue to play, an increasingly important role as
they provide systems and methods to image, quantify and fuse both structural and
functional information of the human being in vivo. These two main
research areas include the transformation of generic computational models to
represent specific subjects thus paving the way for personalized computational
models. Individualization of generic computational models through imaging can be
realized in three complementary directions: a) definition of the
subject-specific computational domain (anatomy) and related subdomains (tissue
types); b) definition of boundary and initial conditions from (dynamic) imaging;
and c) characterization of the structural and functional tissue properties. In
addition, imaging has also a pivotal role in the evaluation and validation of
such models both in human and in animal models, and in the translation of such
models to the clinical setting with both diagnostic and therapeutic
applications.
The applications of image-based VPH/Physiome models in basic and clinical domains are vast but, broadly speaking, they hold the promise to become new virtual imaging techniques. Effectively more, and often non-observable, parameters will be imaged in silico based on the integration of observable but sometimes sparse and inconsistent multimodal images and physiological measurements. Computational models will serve to engender interpretation of the measurements in a way compliant with the underlying biophysical, biochemical or biological laws of the physiological or pathophysiological processes under investigation. Ultimately, such investigative tools and systems will help our understanding of disease processes, the natural history of disease evolution, and the influence on the course of a disease of pharmacological and/or interventional therapeutic procedures.
We invite
submission of papers describing new methods and tools for image-based approaches
to the VPH/Physiome. The special issue will give particular attention to
contributions describing methods and tools combined with a thorough clinical
evaluation. Suggested topics include but are not restricted to:
· Image-related ontologies to organize
biomedical knowledge and their cross-linkage to image databases
· Markup languages to encode
image-derived models of human and biological structure and function in a
standard format for sharing between different application
programs and for re-use as components of more
comprehensive models
· Image databases providing access to
structural/functional information at the cell, tissue, organ and system levels
· Methods to render and integrate
image information with computational models of cell function such as ion channel
electrophysiology, cell signaling and
metabolic pathways, transport, motility, the cell
cycle, etc. in 2D and 3D graphical form
· Techniques for displaying and
interacting with organ and system models, across all spatial and temporal scales
and including multiscale applications
· Techniques for image-based
non-invasive estimation of fine structure, tissue distribution and material
properties in order to personalize computational models
· Techniques for efficient and
high-throughput pre- and post-processing of image-based computational models
· Applications of computational models
for subject-specific interventional planning and therapy customization
· Applications of computational models
for in silico understanding of disease processes and their progression
· Applications of computational models
for design, assessment and optimization of medical devices and products in in
silico populations derived from image
information
· Applications of large-scale modeling
and simulation studies involving imaging information and enabling computational
technologies (e.g. grid computing, high-
performance computing, distributed databases)
Guest Editors:
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Alejandro F. Frangi, PhD & Bart Bijnens, PhD Center for Computational Imaging & Simulation Technologies in Biomedicine Information & Communications Technologies Department Universitat Pompeu Fabra Barcelona, Spain Phone/Fax: +34 93 5421451 / +34 93 5421451 e-mail: alejandro.frangi@upf.edu & bart.bijnens@upf.edu
|
Rod Hose, PhD Academic Unit of Medical Physics University of Sheffield Sheffield, UK
Phone: +44 114 2713921 / +44 114 2712078 e-mail: d.r.hose@sheffield.ac.uk
|
Peter J. Hunter, PhD Bioengineering Institute University of Auckland Auckland, New Zealand
Phone:+649 3737599 / +649 3677157 e-mail: p.hunter@auckland.ac.nz
|
Schedule:
Submission of manuscripts: 15th September 2008
Acceptance/rejection notification: 1st January 2009
Revised manuscripts due: 1st March 2009
Publication Special Issue: July 2009