3 research outputs found

    Slantlet transform-based segmentation and α -shape theory-based 3D visualization and volume calculation methods for MRI brain tumour

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    Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) being the foremost significant component of medical diagnosis which requires careful, efficient, precise and reliable image analyses for brain tumour detection, segmentation, visualisation and volume calculation. The inherently varying nature of tumour shapes, locations and image intensities make brain tumour detection greatly intricate. Certainly, having a perfect result of brain tumour detection and segmentation is advantageous. Despite several available methods, tumour detection and segmentation are far from being resolved. Meanwhile, the progress of 3D visualisation and volume calculation of brain tumour is very limited due to absence of ground truth. Thus, this study proposes four new methods, namely abnormal MRI slice detection, brain tumour segmentation based on Slantlet Transform (SLT), 3D visualization and volume calculation of brain tumour based on Alpha (α) shape theory. In addition, two new datasets along with ground truth are created to validate the shape and volume of the brain tumour. The methodology involves three main phases. In the first phase, it begins with the cerebral tissue extraction, followed by abnormal block detection and its fine-tuning mechanism, and ends with abnormal slice detection based on the detected abnormal blocks. The second phase involves brain tumour segmentation that covers three processes. The abnormal slice is first decomposed using the SLT, then its significant coefficients are selected using Donoho universal threshold. The resultant image is composed using inverse SLT to obtain the tumour region. Finally, in the third phase, four original ideas are proposed to visualise and calculate the volume of the tumour. The first idea involves the determination of an optimal α value using a new formula. The second idea is to merge all tumour points for all abnormal slices using the α value to form a set of tetrahedrons. The third idea is to select the most relevant tetrahedrons using the α value as the threshold. The fourth idea is to calculate the volume of the tumour based on the selected tetrahedrons. In order to evaluate the performance of the proposed methods, a series of experiments are conducted using three standard datasets which comprise of 4567 MRI slices of 35 patients. The methods are evaluated using standard practices and benchmarked against the best and up-to-date techniques. Based on the experiments, the proposed methods have produced very encouraging results with an accuracy rate of 96% for the abnormality slice detection along with sensitivity and specificity of 99% for brain tumour segmentation. A perfect result for the 3D visualisation and volume calculation of brain tumour is also attained. The admirable features of the results suggest that the proposed methods may constitute a basis for reliable MRI brain tumour diagnosis and treatments

    Confidence Guided Enhancing Brain Tumor Segmentation In Multi-Parametric Mri

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    Enhancing brain tumor segmentation for accurate tumor volume measurement is a challenging task due to the large variation of tumor appearance and shape, which makes it difficult to incorporate prior knowledge commonly used by other medical image segmentation tasks. In this paper, a novel idea of confidence surface is proposed to guide the segmentation of enhancing brain tumor using information across multi-parametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Texture information along with the typical intensity information from pre-contrast T1 weighted (T1 pre), post-contrast T1 weighted (T1 post), T2 weighted (T2), and fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI images are used to train a discriminative classifier at pixel level. The classifier is used to generate a confidence surface, which gives a likelihood of each pixel being a tumor or non-tumor. The obtained confidence surface is then incorporated into two classical methods for segmentation guidance. The proposed approach was evaluated on 19 groups of MRI images with tumor and promising results have been demonstrated. © 2012 IEEE

    CONFIDENCE GUIDED ENHANCING BRAIN TUMOR SEGMENTATION IN MULTI-PARAMETRIC MRI

    No full text
    Enhancing brain tumor segmentation for accurate tumor volume measurement is a challenging task due to the large variation of tumor appearance and shape, which makes it difficult to incorporate prior knowledge commonly used by other medical image segmentation tasks. In this paper, a novel idea of confidence surface is proposed to guide the segmentation of enhancing brain tumor using information across multi-parametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Texture information along with the typical intensity information from pre-contrast T1 weighted (T1pre), post-contrast T1 weighted (T1post), T2 weighted (T2), and fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI images are used to train a discriminative classifier at pixel level. The classifier is used to generate a confidence surface, which gives a likelihood of each pixel being a tumor or non-tumor. The obtained confidence surface is then incorporated into two classical methods for segmentation guidance. The proposed approach was evaluated on 19 groups of MRI images with tumor and promising results have been demonstrated
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