440 research outputs found
Early Diagnosis of Lung Tumors for Extending Patients’ Life Using Deep Neural Networks
Funding Information: Funding Statement: This work was funded by the Researchers Supporting Project Number (RSP2023R 509) King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. This work was supported in part by the Higher Education Sprout Project from the Ministry of Education (MOE) and National Science and Technology Council, Taiwan, (109-2628-E-224-001-MY3), and in part by Isuzu Optics Corporation. Dr. Shih-Yu Chen is the corresponding author. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 Tech Science Press. All rights reserved.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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Quantitative body shape analysis for obesity evaluation
Obesity is a public health concern as it is associated with a number of diseases, such as diabetes mellitus type 2, cardiovascular disease, some forms of renal failure and certain types of cancers. Growing evidence suggests that it is not only the amount of fat, but also its distribution in the body that is important to predict metabolic risk factors and adverse changes in organs. In this respect, it is necessary to develop convenient and inexpensive measures to characterize human body fat distribution and to investigate the unknown linkage between intrinsic adiposity and external body shape.
This dissertation research aims to improve the obesity assessment by developing new quantitative measurements that comprehensively characterize body shape, and are highly relevant to intrinsic abdominal adiposity conditions. The proposed body shape descriptors were defined based on three-dimensional body images reconstructed from a custom-made stereovision body imaging system, which is particularly suitable for clinical use as an obesity monitoring equipment for its high portability and affordability.
In this study, we developed a fully-automated algorithm to process T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) slices for abdominal adiposity measurements. This algorithm dramatically reduces the processing time and workload compared with traditional manual or semi-automatic methods for MRI processing, and greatly improves the repeatability and objectivity of fat assessments. A new obesity categorization method was then defined based on MRI adiposity data to depict characteristics of abdominal fat distribution, and the associations between the body shape descriptors and the MRI abdominal adiposity were explored. It was shown that the proposed body shape descriptors are able to capture the body shape differences between the subjects with dissimilar internal fat distribution (i.e., different categories), and to provide excellent prediction for the category of fat distribution through an optimized support-vector-machine classifier. The predictive models established in this dissertation demonstrate that the novel body shape descriptors were also effective for prediction of the volumes of abdominal visceral fat and subcutaneous fat accumulated in male and female adults.
This dissertation introduces an innovative approach to assess obesity and fat distribution based on newly defined shape descriptors, and provides new findings that reveal the associations of intrinsic fat distribution with external body shapes, which enable both qualitative and quantitative assessment of obesity from body shape measurements.Biomedical Engineerin
Segmentation, tracking, and kinematics of lung parenchyma and lung tumors from 4D CT with application to radiation treatment planning.
This thesis is concerned with development of techniques for efficient computerized analysis of 4-D CT data. The goal is to have a highly automated approach to segmentation of the lung boundary and lung nodules inside the lung. The determination of exact lung tumor location over space and time by image segmentation is an essential step to track thoracic malignancies. Accurate image segmentation helps clinical experts examine the anatomy and structure and determine the disease progress. Since 4-D CT provides structural and anatomical information during tidal breathing, we use the same data to also measure mechanical properties related to deformation of the lung tissue including Jacobian and strain at high resolutions and as a function of time. Radiation Treatment of patients with lung cancer can benefit from knowledge of these measures of regional ventilation. Graph-cuts techniques have been popular for image segmentation since they are able to treat highly textured data via robust global optimization, avoiding local minima in graph based optimization. The graph-cuts methods have been used to extract globally optimal boundaries from images by s/t cut, with energy function based on model-specific visual cues, and useful topological constraints. The method makes N-dimensional globally optimal segmentation possible with good computational efficiency. Even though the graph-cuts method can extract objects where there is a clear intensity difference, segmentation of organs or tumors pose a challenge. For organ segmentation, many segmentation methods using a shape prior have been proposed. However, in the case of lung tumors, the shape varies from patient to patient, and with location. In this thesis, we use a shape prior for tumors through a training step and PCA analysis based on the Active Shape Model (ASM). The method has been tested on real patient data from the Brown Cancer Center at the University of Louisville. We performed temporal B-spline deformable registration of the 4-D CT data - this yielded 3-D deformation fields between successive respiratory phases from which measures of regional lung function were determined. During the respiratory cycle, the lung volume changes and five different lobes of the lung (two in the left and three in the right lung) show different deformation yielding different strain and Jacobian maps. In this thesis, we determine the regional lung mechanics in the Lagrangian frame of reference through different respiratory phases, for example, Phase10 to 20, Phase10 to 30, Phase10 to 40, and Phase10 to 50. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) lung imaging using radioactive tracers with SPECT ventilation and SPECT perfusion imaging also provides functional information. As part of an IRB-approved study therefore, we registered the max-inhale CT volume to both VSPECT and QSPECT data sets using the Demon\u27s non-rigid registration algorithm in patient subjects. Subsequently, statistical correlation between CT ventilation images (Jacobian and strain values), with both VSPECT and QSPECT was undertaken. Through statistical analysis with the Spearman\u27s rank correlation coefficient, we found that Jacobian values have the highest correlation with both VSPECT and QSPECT
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