39 research outputs found

    Una revisión sistemática de métodos de aprendizaje profundo aplicados a imágenes oculares

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    Artificial intelligence is having an important effect on different areas of medicine, and ophthalmology has not been the exception. In particular, deep learning methods have been applied successfully to the detection of clinical signs and the classification of ocular diseases. This represents a great potential to increase the number of people correctly diagnosed. In ophthalmology, deep learning methods have primarily been applied to eye fundus images and optical coherence tomography. On the one hand, these methods have achieved an outstanding performance in the detection of ocular diseases such as: diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma, diabetic macular degeneration and age-related macular degeneration.  On the other hand, several worldwide challenges have shared big eye imaging datasets with segmentation of part of the eyes, clinical signs and the ocular diagnostic performed by experts. In addition, these methods are breaking the stigma of black-box models, with the delivering of interpretable clinically information. This review provides an overview of the state-of-the-art deep learning methods used in ophthalmic images, databases and potential challenges for ocular diagnosisLa inteligencia artificial está teniendo un importante impacto en diversas áreas de la medicina y a la oftalmología no ha sido la excepción. En particular, los métodos de aprendizaje profundo han sido aplicados con éxito en la detección de signos clínicos y la clasificación de enfermedades oculares. Esto representa un potencial impacto en el incremento de pacientes correctamente y oportunamente diagnosticados. En oftalmología, los métodos de aprendizaje profundo se han aplicado principalmente a imágenes de fondo de ojo y tomografía de coherencia óptica. Por un lado, estos métodos han logrado un rendimiento sobresaliente en la detección de enfermedades oculares tales como: retinopatía diabética, glaucoma, degeneración macular diabética y degeneración macular relacionada con la edad. Por otro lado, varios desafíos mundiales han compartido grandes conjuntos de datos con segmentación de parte de los ojos, signos clínicos y el diagnóstico ocular realizado por expertos. Adicionalmente, estos métodos están rompiendo el estigma de los modelos de caja negra, con la entrega de información clínica interpretable. Esta revisión proporciona una visión general de los métodos de aprendizaje profundo de última generación utilizados en imágenes oftálmicas, bases de datos y posibles desafíos para los diagnósticos oculare

    Deep learning analysis of eye fundus images to support medical diagnosis

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    Machine learning techniques have been successfully applied to support medical decision making of cancer, heart diseases and degenerative diseases of the brain. In particular, deep learning methods have been used for early detection of abnormalities in the eye that could improve the diagnosis of different ocular diseases, especially in developing countries, where there are major limitations to access to specialized medical treatment. However, the early detection of clinical signs such as blood vessel, optic disc alterations, exudates, hemorrhages, drusen, and microaneurysms presents three main challenges: the ocular images can be affected by noise artifact, the features of the clinical signs depend specifically on the acquisition source, and the combination of local signs and grading disease label is not an easy task. This research approaches the problem of combining local signs and global labels of different acquisition sources of medical information as a valuable tool to support medical decision making in ocular diseases. Different models for different eye diseases were developed. Four models were developed using eye fundus images: for DME, it was designed a two-stages model that uses a shallow model to predict an exudate binary mask. Then, the binary mask is stacked with the raw fundus image into a 4-channel array as an input of a deep convolutional neural network for diabetic macular edema diagnosis; for glaucoma, it was developed three deep learning models. First, it was defined a deep learning model based on three-stages that contains an initial stage for automatically segment two binary masks containing optic disc and physiological cup segmentation, followed by an automatic morphometric features extraction stage from previous segmentations, and a final classification stage that supports the glaucoma diagnosis with intermediate medical information. Two late-data-fusion methods that fused morphometric features from cartesian and polar segmentation of the optic disc and physiological cup with features extracted from raw eye fundus images. On the other hand, two models were defined using optical coherence tomography. First, a customized convolutional neural network termed as OCT-NET to extract features from OCT volumes to classify DME, DR-DME and AMD conditions. In addition, this model generates images with highlighted local information about the clinical signs, and it estimates the number of slides inside a volume with local abnormalities. Finally, a 3D-Deep learning model that uses OCT volumes as an input to estimate the retinal thickness map useful to grade AMD. The methods were systematically evaluated using ten free public datasets. The methods were compared and validated against other state-of-the-art algorithms and the results were also qualitatively evaluated by ophthalmology experts from Fundación Oftalmológica Nacional. In addition, the proposed methods were tested as a diagnosis support tool of diabetic macular edema, glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy and age-related macular degeneration using two different ocular imaging representations. Thus, we consider that this research could be potentially a big step in building telemedicine tools that could support medical personnel for detecting ocular diseases using eye fundus images and optical coherence tomography.Las técnicas de aprendizaje automático se han aplicado con éxito para apoyar la toma de decisiones médicas sobre el cáncer, las enfermedades cardíacas y las enfermedades degenerativas del cerebro. En particular, se han utilizado métodos de aprendizaje profundo para la detección temprana de anormalidades en el ojo que podrían mejorar el diagnóstico de diferentes enfermedades oculares, especialmente en países en desarrollo, donde existen grandes limitaciones para acceder a tratamiento médico especializado. Sin embargo, la detección temprana de signos clínicos como vasos sanguíneos, alteraciones del disco óptico, exudados, hemorragias, drusas y microaneurismas presenta tres desafíos principales: las imágenes oculares pueden verse afectadas por artefactos de ruido, las características de los signos clínicos dependen específicamente de fuente de adquisición, y la combinación de signos locales y clasificación de la enfermedad no es una tarea fácil. Esta investigación aborda el problema de combinar signos locales y etiquetas globales de diferentes fuentes de adquisición de información médica como una herramienta valiosa para apoyar la toma de decisiones médicas en enfermedades oculares. Se desarrollaron diferentes modelos para diferentes enfermedades oculares. Se desarrollaron cuatro modelos utilizando imágenes de fondo de ojo: para DME, se diseñó un modelo de dos etapas que utiliza un modelo superficial para predecir una máscara binaria de exudados. Luego, la máscara binaria se apila con la imagen de fondo de ojo original en una matriz de 4 canales como entrada de una red neuronal convolucional profunda para el diagnóstico de edema macular diabético; para el glaucoma, se desarrollaron tres modelos de aprendizaje profundo. Primero, se definió un modelo de aprendizaje profundo basado en tres etapas que contiene una etapa inicial para segmentar automáticamente dos máscaras binarias que contienen disco óptico y segmentación fisiológica de la copa, seguido de una etapa de extracción de características morfométricas automáticas de segmentaciones anteriores y una etapa de clasificación final que respalda el diagnóstico de glaucoma con información médica intermedia. Dos métodos de fusión de datos tardíos que fusionaron características morfométricas de la segmentación cartesiana y polar del disco óptico y la copa fisiológica con características extraídas de imágenes de fondo de ojo crudo. Por otro lado, se definieron dos modelos mediante tomografía de coherencia óptica. Primero, una red neuronal convolucional personalizada denominada OCT-NET para extraer características de los volúmenes OCT para clasificar las condiciones DME, DR-DME y AMD. Además, este modelo genera imágenes con información local resaltada sobre los signos clínicos, y estima el número de diapositivas dentro de un volumen con anomalías locales. Finalmente, un modelo de aprendizaje 3D-Deep que utiliza volúmenes OCT como entrada para estimar el mapa de espesor retiniano útil para calificar AMD. Los métodos se evaluaron sistemáticamente utilizando diez conjuntos de datos públicos gratuitos. Los métodos se compararon y validaron con otros algoritmos de vanguardia y los resultados también fueron evaluados cualitativamente por expertos en oftalmología de la Fundación Oftalmológica Nacional. Además, los métodos propuestos se probaron como una herramienta de diagnóstico de edema macular diabético, glaucoma, retinopatía diabética y degeneración macular relacionada con la edad utilizando dos representaciones de imágenes oculares diferentes. Por lo tanto, consideramos que esta investigación podría ser potencialmente un gran paso en la construcción de herramientas de telemedicina que podrían ayudar al personal médico a detectar enfermedades oculares utilizando imágenes de fondo de ojo y tomografía de coherencia óptica.Doctorad

    Image preprocessing in classification and identification of diabetic eye diseases

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    Diabetic eye disease (DED) is a cluster of eye problem that affects diabetic patients. Identifying DED is a crucial activity in retinal fundus images because early diagnosis and treatment can eventually minimize the risk of visual impairment. The retinal fundus image plays a significant role in early DED classification and identification. An accurate diagnostic model’s development using a retinal fundus image depends highly on image quality and quantity. This paper presents a methodical study on the significance of image processing for DED classification. The proposed automated classification framework for DED was achieved in several steps: image quality enhancement, image segmentation (region of interest), image augmentation (geometric transformation), and classification. The optimal results were obtained using traditional image processing methods with a new build convolution neural network (CNN) architecture. The new built CNN combined with the traditional image processing approach presented the best performance with accuracy for DED classification problems. The results of the experiments conducted showed adequate accuracy, specificity, and sensitivity. © 2021, The Author(s)

    Artificial intelligence in retinal disease: clinical application, challenges, and future directions

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    Retinal diseases are a leading cause of blindness in developed countries, accounting for the largest share of visually impaired children, working-age adults (inherited retinal disease), and elderly individuals (age-related macular degeneration). These conditions need specialised clinicians to interpret multimodal retinal imaging, with diagnosis and intervention potentially delayed. With an increasing and ageing population, this is becoming a global health priority. One solution is the development of artificial intelligence (AI) software to facilitate rapid data processing. Herein, we review research offering decision support for the diagnosis, classification, monitoring, and treatment of retinal disease using AI. We have prioritised diabetic retinopathy, age-related macular degeneration, inherited retinal disease, and retinopathy of prematurity. There is cautious optimism that these algorithms will be integrated into routine clinical practice to facilitate access to vision-saving treatments, improve efficiency of healthcare systems, and assist clinicians in processing the ever-increasing volume of multimodal data, thereby also liberating time for doctor-patient interaction and co-development of personalised management plans

    Applying supervised contrastive learning for the detection of diabetic retinopathy and its severity levels from fundus images

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    Diabetic Retinopathy (DR) is a major complication in human eyes among the diabetic patients. Early detection of the DR can save many patients from permanent blindness. Various artificial intelligent based systems have been proposed and they outperform human analysis in accurate detection of the DR. In most of the traditional deep learning models, the cross-entropy is used as a common loss function in a single stage end-to-end training method. However, it has been recently identified that this loss function has some limitations such as poor margin leading to false results, sensitive to noisy data and hyperparameter variations. To overcome these issues, supervised contrastive learning (SCL) has been introduced. In this study, SCL method, a two-stage training method with supervised contrastive loss function was proposed for the first time to the best of authors' knowledge to identify the DR and its severity stages from fundus images (FIs) using “APTOS 2019 Blindness Detection” dataset. “Messidor-2” dataset was also used to conduct experiments for further validating the model's performance. Contrast Limited Adaptive Histogram Equalization (CLAHE) was applied for enhancing the image quality and the pre-trained Xception CNN model was deployed as the encoder with transfer learning. To interpret the SCL of the model, t-SNE method was used to visualize the embedding space (unit hyper sphere) composed of 128 D space into a 2 D space. The proposed model achieved a test accuracy of 98.36%, and AUC score of 98.50% to identify the DR (Binary classification) and a test accuracy of 84.364%, and AUC score of 93.819% for five stages grading with the APTOS 2019 dataset. Other evaluation metrics (precision, recall, F1-score) were also determined with APTOS 2019 as well as with Messidor-2 for analyzing the performance of the proposed model. It was also concluded that the proposed method achieved better performance in detecting the DR compared to the conventional CNN without SCL and other state-of-the-art methods
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