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Sylvia Saalfeld

Sylvia Saalfeld contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

SynVA: A Modular Toolkit for Vessel Generation and Aneurysm Editing

Intracranial aneurysms (IAs), characterized by unpredictable growth and risk of rupture, are a major cause of stroke and can lead to life-threatening hemorrhages with high mortality and long-term disability. With aging populations, the incidence and overall burden of cerebrovascular diseases are expected to increase, highlighting the need for scalable approaches to analyze complex medical data and improve population-level understanding of these conditions. While digital twins and deep learning offer promising avenues for improving diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment, their effectiveness is limited by the scarcity of large-scale, high-quality medical data and corresponding labels. We present Synthetic VAsculature (SynVA), a modular toolkit for vascular mesh generation and anatomically consistent aneurysm synthesis. SynVA combines novel flow-matching-based methods for generating healthy vessel meshes with learning-based approaches for anatomy-conditioned aneurysm mesh generation - aneurysms are computed from pre-existing vascular geometries rather than being generated in isolation. In addition, we introduce the SynVA procedural model for vascular and aneurysm synthesis based solely on physiological principles and statistical priors, which enables the generation of large-scale datasets (e.g., for the training of mesh-based generative models). To this end, we release a dataset of 50,000 fully labeled mesh samples for a variety of downstream vision tasks, such as semantic segmentation. Extensive quantitative and qualitative evaluations demonstrate that SynVA generates realistic vessel geometries and anatomically plausible aneurysms. Specifically, our experiments indicate that some methods produce aneurysm shapes more aligned with expert human perception while others perform better on quantitative similarity metrics with reconstructions of real aneurysms.

preprint2020arXiv

MedMeshCNN -- Enabling MeshCNN for Medical Surface Models

Background and objective: MeshCNN is a recently proposed Deep Learning framework that drew attention due to its direct operation on irregular, non-uniform 3D meshes. On selected benchmarking datasets, it outperformed state-of-the-art methods within classification and segmentation tasks. Especially, the medical domain provides a large amount of complex 3D surface models that may benefit from processing with MeshCNN. However, several limitations prevent outstanding performances of MeshCNN on highly diverse medical surface models. Within this work, we propose MedMeshCNN as an expansion for complex, diverse, and fine-grained medical data. Methods: MedMeshCNN follows the functionality of MeshCNN with a significantly increased memory efficiency that allows retaining patient-specific properties during the segmentation process. Furthermore, it enables the segmentation of pathological structures that often come with highly imbalanced class distributions. Results: We tested the performance of MedMeshCNN on a complex part segmentation task of intracranial aneurysms and their surrounding vessel structures and reached a mean Intersection over Union of 63.24\%. The pathological aneurysm is segmented with an Intersection over Union of 71.4\%. Conclusions: These results demonstrate that MedMeshCNN enables the application of MeshCNN on complex, fine-grained medical surface meshes. The imbalanced class distribution deriving from the pathological finding is considered by MedMeshCNN and patient-specific properties are mostly retained during the segmentation process.

preprint2020arXiv

Spinal Metastases Segmentation in MR Imaging using Deep Convolutional Neural Networks

This study's objective was to segment spinal metastases in diagnostic MR images using a deep learning-based approach. Segmentation of such lesions can present a pivotal step towards enhanced therapy planning and validation, as well as intervention support during minimally invasive and image-guided surgeries like radiofrequency ablations. For this purpose, we used a U-Net like architecture trained with 40 clinical cases including both, lytic and sclerotic lesion types and various MR sequences. Our proposed method was evaluated with regards to various factors influencing the segmentation quality, e.g. the used MR sequences and the input dimension. We quantitatively assessed our experiments using Dice coefficients, sensitivity and specificity rates. Compared to expertly annotated lesion segmentations, the experiments yielded promising results with average Dice scores up to 77.6% and mean sensitivity rates up to 78.9%. To our best knowledge, our proposed study is one of the first to tackle this particular issue, which limits direct comparability with related works. In respect to similar deep learning-based lesion segmentations, e.g. in liver MR images or spinal CT images, our experiments showed similar or in some respects superior segmentation quality. Overall, our automatic approach can provide almost expert-like segmentation accuracy in this challenging and ambitious task.