1,687 research outputs found

    Automated Fovea Detection Based on Unsupervised Retinal Vessel Segmentation Method

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    The Computer Assisted Diagnosis systems could save workloads and give objective diagnostic to ophthalmologists. At first level of automated screening of systems feature extraction is the fundamental step. One of these retinal features is the fovea. The fovea is a small fossa on the fundus, which is represented by a deep-red or red-brown color in color retinal images. By observing retinal images, it appears that the main vessels diverge from the optic nerve head and follow a specific course that can be geometrically modeled as a parabola, with a common vertex inside the optic nerve head and the fovea located along the apex of this parabola curve. Therefore, based on this assumption, the main retinal blood vessels are segmented and fitted to a parabolic model. With respect to the core vascular structure, we can thus detect fovea in the fundus images. For the vessel segmentation, our algorithm addresses the image locally where homogeneity of features is more likely to occur. The algorithm is composed of 4 steps: multi-overlapping windows, local Radon transform, vessel validation, and parabolic fitting. In order to extract blood vessels, sub-vessels should be extracted in local windows. The high contrast between blood vessels and image background in the images cause the vessels to be associated with peaks in the Radon space. The largest vessels, using a high threshold of the Radon transform, determines the main course or overall configuration of the blood vessels which when fitted to a parabola, leads to the future localization of the fovea. In effect, with an accurate fit, the fovea normally lies along the slope joining the vertex and the focus. The darkest region along this line is the indicative of the fovea. To evaluate our method, we used 220 fundus images from a rural database (MUMS-DB) and one public one (DRIVE). The results show that, among 20 images of the first public database (DRIVE) we detected fovea in 85% of them. Also for the MUMS-DB database among 200 images we detect fovea correctly in 83% on them

    Retinal Vasculature Identification and Characterization Using OCT Imaging

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    The eye fundus is the part of the human body where the blood vessels can be directly observed and studied. For this reason, the analysis and diagnosis of many relevant diseases that affect the circulatory system, for example, reference, hypertension, diabetes or arteriosclerosis can be supported by the use of this source of information, analyzing their degree of severity and impact by the study of the properties of the retinal microcirculation. The development of computer aided-diagnosis tools became relevant over the recent years as they support and facilitate the work of specialists, helping to accurately identify the target structures in many processes of analysis and diagnosis. In that sense, the automatic identification of the retinal vasculature is crucial as its manual identification is an exhaustive and tedious work when it is manually performed by the experts. This chapter presents an analysis of the characteristics of the optical coherence tomography imaging and its potential for the retinal vascular identification and characterization. In that sense, we also analyze computational approaches to automatically obtain and characterize the retinal vasculature and provide an intuitive visualization that facilitates the posterior clinical analysis of relevant diseases such as hypertension or diabetes

    Artery/Vein Vessel Tree Identification in Near-Infrared Reflectance Retinographies

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    This version of the article has been accepted for publication, after peer review and is subject to Springer Nature’s AM terms of use, but is not the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections. The Version of Record is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10278-019-00235-x[Abstract]: An accurate identification of the retinal arteries and veins is a relevant issue in the development of automatic computer-aided diagnosis systems that facilitate the analysis of different relevant diseases that affect the vascular system as diabetes or hypertension, among others. The proposed method offers a complete analysis of the retinal vascular tree structure by its identification and posterior classification into arteries and veins using optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans. These scans include the near-infrared reflectance retinography images, the ones we used in this work, in combination with the corresponding histological sections. The method, firstly, segments the vessel tree and identifies its characteristic points. Then, Global Intensity-Based Features (GIBS) are used to measure the differences in the intensity profiles between arteries and veins. A k-means clustering classifier employs these features to evaluate the potential of artery/vein identification of the proposed method. Finally, a post-processing stage is applied to correct misclassifications using context information and maximize the performance of the classification process. The methodology was validated using an OCT image dataset retrieved from 46 different patients, where 2,392 vessel segments and 97,294 vessel points were manually labeled by an expert clinician. The method achieved satisfactory results, reaching a best accuracy of 93.35% in the identification of arteries and veins, being the first proposal that faces this issue in this image modality.This work is supported by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Government of Spain and FEDER funds of the European Union through the DTS18/00136 research project and by the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Government of Spain through the DPI2015-69948-R research project. Also, this work has received financial support from the European Union (European Regional Development Fund—ERDF); the Xunta de Galicia, Centro singular de investigación de Galicia accreditation 2016–2019, Ref. ED431G/01; and Grupos de Referencia Competitiva, Ref. ED431C 2016-047.Xunta de Galicia; ED431G/01Xunta de Galicia; ED431C 2016-04

    Evaluation of atherosclerotic plaques with nano-probes for intravascular cardiological imaging diagnosis

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    Cardiovascular diseases represent the leading cause of mortality and disability worldwide. Besides, it is estimated that these numbers will increase significantly in the future. More specifically, atherosclerosis is present in most of the main cardiovascular diseases, making its study urgent and important to develop new diagnostic tools. The most relevant limitation in the current investigation of the evaluation of atherosclerosis is the impossibility to distinguish stable and prone to rupture (unstable) plaques in coronary arteries. Associated with the instability phenomena, in plaques prone to rupture, are increased thickness of tissue layers (already detectable but not provide an unequivocal diagnosis) and inflammatory processes (not yet detectable but only present when the lesion evolves higher risk to rupture). Aiming to detect the precise location of inflammatory processes, two types of contrast agents (nano probes) were synthetized, gold nanoparticles and microbubbles. Also, to replicate the behavior of human arteries, three-dimensional tissue simulating structures (phantoms) were fabricated and optimized. To evaluate the performance of the contrast agents, both in the phantoms and post-mortem human arteries, optical coherence tomography (OCT) images were acquired in a clinical environment, and other techniques were performed (confocal microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy) to characterize the samples. Microbubbles revealed to be a better contrast agent than gold nanoparticles having a clearly noticeable enhancement of the OCT signal. After the acquisition of several OCT images on both types of samples (arteries and phantoms) an automatic imaging processing software was developed to detect the presence of the contrast agents and its posterior location. The software uses MATLAB as a programming language and with a user-friendly interface the user can access numerous parameters of the analyzed image and even edit them manually. In the end of the automatic processing, the user has the information of the number of regions of interest as well as their visual location

    Vessel tractography using an intensity based tensor model with branch detection

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    In this paper, we present a tubular structure seg- mentation method that utilizes a second order tensor constructed from directional intensity measurements, which is inspired from diffusion tensor image (DTI) modeling. The constructed anisotropic tensor which is fit inside a vessel drives the segmen- tation analogously to a tractography approach in DTI. Our model is initialized at a single seed point and is capable of capturing whole vessel trees by an automatic branch detection algorithm developed in the same framework. The centerline of the vessel as well as its thickness is extracted. Performance results within the Rotterdam Coronary Artery Algorithm Evaluation framework are provided for comparison with existing techniques. 96.4% average overlap with ground truth delineated by experts is obtained in addition to other measures reported in the paper. Moreover, we demonstrate further quantitative results over synthetic vascular datasets, and we provide quantitative experiments for branch detection on patient Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA) volumes, as well as qualitative evaluations on the same CTA datasets, from visual scores by a cardiologist expert

    Intima-Media Thickness: Setting a Standard for a Completely Automated Method of Ultrasound Measurement

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    The intima - media thickness (IMT) of the common carotid artery is a widely used clinical marker of severe cardiovascular diseases. IMT is usually manually measured on longitudinal B-Mode ultrasound images. Many computer-based techniques for IMT measurement have been proposed to overcome the limits of manual segmentation. Most of these, however, require a certain degree of user interaction. In this paper we describe a new completely automated layers extraction (CALEXia) technique for the segmentation and IMT measurement of carotid wall in ultrasound images. CALEXia is based on an integrated approach consisting of feature extraction, line fitting, and classification that enables the automated tracing of the carotid adventitial walls. IMT is then measured by relying on a fuzzy K-means classifier. We tested CALEXia on a database of 200 images. We compared CALEXia performances to those of a previously developed methodology that was based on signal analysis (CULEXsa). Three trained operators manually segmented the images and the average profiles were considered as the ground truth. The average error from CALEXia for lumen - intima (LI) and media - adventitia (MA) interface tracings were 1.46 ± 1.51 pixel (0.091 ± 0.093 mm) and 0.40 ± 0.87 pixel (0.025 ± 0.055 mm), respectively. The corresponding errors for CULEXsa were 0.55 ± 0.51 pixels (0.035 ± 0.032 mm) and 0.59 ± 0.46 pixels (0.037 ± 0.029 mm). The IMT measurement error was equal to 0.87 ± 0.56 pixel (0.054 ± 0.035 mm) for CALEXia and 0.12 ± 0.14 pixel (0.01 ± 0.01 mm) for CULEXsa. Thus, CALEXia showed limited performance in segmenting the LI interface, but outperformed CULEXsa in the MA interface and in the number of images correctly processed (10 for CALEXia and 16 for CULEXsa). Based on two complementary strategies, we anticipate fusing them for further IMT improvement

    Automatic segmentation and classification methods using optical coherence tomography angiography (Octa): A review and handbook

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    Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is a promising technology for the non-invasive imaging of vasculature. Many studies in literature present automated algorithms to quantify OCTA images, but there is a lack of a review on the most common methods and their comparison considering multiple clinical applications (e.g., ophthalmology and dermatology). Here, we aim to provide readers with a useful review and handbook for automatic segmentation and classification methods using OCTA images, presenting a comparison of techniques found in the literature based on the adopted segmentation or classification method and on the clinical application. Another goal of this study is to provide insight into the direction of research in automated OCTA image analysis, especially in the current era of deep learning

    Caracterización del Edema Macular Diabético mediante análisis automático de Tomografías de Coherencia Óptica

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    Programa Oficial de Doctorado en Computación. 5009V01[Abstract] Diabetic Macular Edema (DME) is one of the most important complications of diabetes and a leading cause of preventable blindness in the developed countries. Among the di erent image modalities, Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) is a non-invasive, cross-sectional and high-resolution imaging technique that is commonly used for the analysis and interpretation of many retinal structures and ocular disorders. In this way, the development of Computer-Aided Diagnosis (CAD) systems has become relevant over the recent years, facilitating and simplifying the work of the clinical specialists in many relevant diagnostic processes, replacing manual procedures that are tedious and highly time-consuming. This thesis proposes a complete methodology for the identi cation and characterization of DMEs using OCT images. To do so, the system combines and exploits di erent clinical knowledge with image processing and machine learning strategies. This automatic system is able to identify and characterize the main retinal structures and several pathological conditions that are associated with the DME disease, following the clinical classi cation of reference in the ophthalmological eld. Despite the complexity and heterogeneity of this relevant ocular pathology, the proposed system achieved satisfactory results, proving to be robust enough to be used in the daily clinical practice, helping the clinicians to produce a more accurate diagnosis and indicate adequate treatments[Resumen] El Edema Macular Diabético (EMD) es una de las complicaciones más importantes de la diabetes y una de las principales causas de ceguera prevenible en los países desarrollados. Entre las diferentes modalidades de imagen, la Tomografía de Coherencia Óptica (TCO) es una técnica de imagen no invasiva, transversal y de alta resolución que se usa comúnmente para el análisis e interpretación de múltiples estructuras retinianas y trastornos oculares. De esta manera, el desarrollo de los sistemas de Diagnóstico Asistido por Ordenador (DAO) se ha vuelto relevante en los últimos años, facilitando y simplificando el trabajo de los especialistas clínicos en muchos procesos diagnósticos relevantes, reemplazando procedimientos manuales que son tediosos y requieren mucho tiempo. Esta tesis propone una metodología completa para la identificación y caracterización de EMDs utilizando imágenes TCO. Para ello, el sistema desarrollado combina y explota diferentes conocimientos clínicos con estrategias de procesamiento de imágenes y aprendizaje automático. Este sistema automático es capaz de identificar y caracterizar las principales estructuras retinianas y diferentes afecciones patológicas asociadas con el EMD, siguiendo la clasificación clínica de referencia en el campo oftalmológico. A pesar de la complejidad de esta relevante patología ocular, el sistema propuesto logró resultados satisfactorios, demostrando ser lo sufi cientemente robusto como para ser usado en la práctica clínica diaria, ayudando a los médicos a producir diagnósticos más precisos y tratamientos más adecuados.[Resumo] O Edema Macular Diabético ( EMD) é unha das complicacións máis importantes da diabetes e unha das principais causas de cegueira prevenible nos países desenvoltos. Entre as diferentes modalidades de imaxe, a Tomografía de Coherencia Óptica ( TCO) é unha técnica de imaxe non invasiva, transversal e de alta resolución que se usa comunmente para a análise e interpretación de múltiples estruturas retinianas e trastornos oculares. Desta maneira, o desenvolvemento dos sistemas de Diagnóstico Asistido por Computador ( DAO) volveuse relevante nos últimos anos, facilitando e simplificando o traballo dos especialistas clínicos en moitos procesos diagnósticos relevantes, substituíndo procedementos manuais que son tediosos e requiren moito tempo. Esta tese propón unha metodoloxía completa para a identificación e caracterización de EMDs utilizando imaxes TCO. Para iso, o sistema desenvolto combina e explota diferentes coñecementos clínicos con estratexias de procesamento de imaxes e aprendizaxe automático. Este sistema automático é capaz de identificar e caracterizar as principais estruturas retinianas e diferentes afeccións patolóxicas asociadas co EMD, seguindo a clasificación clínica de referencia no campo oftalmolóxico. A pesar da complexidade desta relevante patoloxía ocular, o sistema proposto logrou resultados satisfactorios, demostrando ser o sufi cientemente robusto como para ser usado na práctica clínica diaria, axudando aos médicos para producir diagnósticos máis precisos e tratamentos máis adecuados
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