90 research outputs found

    Recent Advances in Signal Processing

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    The signal processing task is a very critical issue in the majority of new technological inventions and challenges in a variety of applications in both science and engineering fields. Classical signal processing techniques have largely worked with mathematical models that are linear, local, stationary, and Gaussian. They have always favored closed-form tractability over real-world accuracy. These constraints were imposed by the lack of powerful computing tools. During the last few decades, signal processing theories, developments, and applications have matured rapidly and now include tools from many areas of mathematics, computer science, physics, and engineering. This book is targeted primarily toward both students and researchers who want to be exposed to a wide variety of signal processing techniques and algorithms. It includes 27 chapters that can be categorized into five different areas depending on the application at hand. These five categories are ordered to address image processing, speech processing, communication systems, time-series analysis, and educational packages respectively. The book has the advantage of providing a collection of applications that are completely independent and self-contained; thus, the interested reader can choose any chapter and skip to another without losing continuity

    Artificial Intelligence in Image-Based Screening, Diagnostics, and Clinical Care of Cardiopulmonary Diseases

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    Cardiothoracic and pulmonary diseases are a significant cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the lack of access to clinical care, the overburdened medical system, and the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) in improving medicine. There are a variety of diseases affecting the cardiopulmonary system including lung cancers, heart disease, tuberculosis (TB), etc., in addition to COVID-19-related diseases. Screening, diagnosis, and management of cardiopulmonary diseases has become difficult owing to the limited availability of diagnostic tools and experts, particularly in resource-limited regions. Early screening, accurate diagnosis and staging of these diseases could play a crucial role in treatment and care, and potentially aid in reducing mortality. Radiographic imaging methods such as computed tomography (CT), chest X-rays (CXRs), and echo ultrasound (US) are widely used in screening and diagnosis. Research on using image-based AI and machine learning (ML) methods can help in rapid assessment, serve as surrogates for expert assessment, and reduce variability in human performance. In this Special Issue, “Artificial Intelligence in Image-Based Screening, Diagnostics, and Clinical Care of Cardiopulmonary Diseases”, we have highlighted exemplary primary research studies and literature reviews focusing on novel AI/ML methods and their application in image-based screening, diagnosis, and clinical management of cardiopulmonary diseases. We hope that these articles will help establish the advancements in AI

    A computer vision pipeline for fully automated echocardiogram interpretation

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    Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of global mortality and continues to place a significant burden, in economic and resource terms, upon health services. A 2-dimensional transthoracic echocardiogram captures high spatial and temporal images and videos of the heart and is the modality of choice for the rapid assessment of heart function and structure due to it’s non-invasive nature and lack of ionising radiation. The challenging process of analysing echocardiographic images is currently manually performed by trained experts, though this process is vulnerable to intra- and inter-observer variability and is highly time-consuming. Additionally, echocardiographic images suffer from varying degrees of noise and vary drastically in terms of image quality. Exponential advancements in the fields of artificial intelligence, deep learning and computer vision have enabled the rapid development of automated systems capable of high-precision tasks, often out-performing human experts. This thesis aims to investigate the applicability of applying deep learning methods to automate key processes in the modern echocardiographic laboratory. Namely, view classification, quality assessment, cardiac phase detection, segmentation of the left ventricle and keypoint detection on tissue Doppler imaging strips. State-of-the-art deep learning architectures were applied to each task, and evaluated against ground-truth annotations provided by trained experts. The datasets used throughout each Chapter are diverse and, in some cases, have been made public for the benefit of the research community. To encourage transparency and openness, all code and model weights have been published. Should automated deep learning systems, both online (in terms of providing real-time feedback) and offline (behind the scenes), become integrated within clinical practice, there is great potential for improved accuracy and efficiency, thus improving patient outcomes. Furthermore, health services could save valuable resources such as time and money

    Quantifying atherosclerosis in vasculature using ultrasound imaging

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    Cerebrovascular disease accounts for approximately 30% of the global burden associated with cardiovascular diseases [1]. According to the World Stroke Organisation, there are approximately 13.7 million new stroke cases annually, and just under six million people will die from stroke each year [2]. The underlying cause of this disease is atherosclerosis – a vascular pathology which is characterised by thickening and hardening of blood vessel walls. When fatty substances such as cholesterol accumulate on the inner linings of an artery, they cause a progressive narrowing of the lumen referred to as a stenosis. Localisation and grading of the severity of a stenosis, is important for practitioners to assess the risk of rupture which leads to stroke. Ultrasound imaging is popular for this purpose. It is low cost, non-invasive, and permits a quick assessment of vessel geometry and stenosis by measuring the intima media thickness. Research is showing that 3D monitoring of plaque progression may provide a better indication of sites which are at risk of rupture. Various metrics have been proposed. From these, the quantification of plaques by measuring vessel wall volume (VWV) using the segmented media-adventitia boundaries (MAB) and lumen-intima boundaries (LIB) has been shown to be sensitive to temporal changes in carotid plaque burden. Thus, methods to segment these boundaries are required to help generate VWV measurements with high accuracy, less user interaction and increased robustness to variability in di↵erent user acquisition protocols.ii This work proposes three novel methods to address these requirements, to ultimately produce a highly accurate, fully automated segmentation algorithm which works on intensity-invariant data. The first method proposed was that of generating a novel, intensity-invariant representation of ultrasound data by creating phase-congruency maps from raw unprocessed radio-frequency ultrasound information. Experiments carried out showed that this representation retained the necessary anatomical structural information to facilitate segmentation, while concurrently being invariant to changes in amplitude from the user. The second method proposed was the novel application of Deep Convolutional Networks (DCN) to carotid ultrasound images to achieve fully automatic delineation of the MAB boundaries, in addition to the use of a novel fusion of amplitude and phase congruency data as an image source. Experiments carried out showed that the DCN produces highly accurate and automated results, and that the fusion of amplitude and phase yield superior results to either one alone. The third method proposed was a new geometrically constrained objective function for the network's Stochastic Gradient Descent optimisation, thus tuning it to the segmentation problem at hand, while also developing the network further to concurrently delineate both the MAB and LIB to produce vessel wall contours. Experiments carried out here also show that the novel geometric constraints improve the segmentation results on both MAB and LIB contours. In conclusion, the presented work provides significant novel contributions to field of Carotid Ultrasound segmentation, and with future work, this could lead to implementations which facilitate plaque progression analysis for the end�user

    Texture and Colour in Image Analysis

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    Research in colour and texture has experienced major changes in the last few years. This book presents some recent advances in the field, specifically in the theory and applications of colour texture analysis. This volume also features benchmarks, comparative evaluations and reviews

    Analysis of contrast-enhanced medical images.

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    Early detection of human organ diseases is of great importance for the accurate diagnosis and institution of appropriate therapies. This can potentially prevent progression to end-stage disease by detecting precursors that evaluate organ functionality. In addition, it also assists the clinicians for therapy evaluation, tracking diseases progression, and surgery operations. Advances in functional and contrast-enhanced (CE) medical images enabled accurate noninvasive evaluation of organ functionality due to their ability to provide superior anatomical and functional information about the tissue-of-interest. The main objective of this dissertation is to develop a computer-aided diagnostic (CAD) system for analyzing complex data from CE magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The developed CAD system has been tested in three case studies: (i) early detection of acute renal transplant rejection, (ii) evaluation of myocardial perfusion in patients with ischemic heart disease after heart attack; and (iii), early detection of prostate cancer. However, developing a noninvasive CAD system for the analysis of CE medical images is subject to multiple challenges, including, but are not limited to, image noise and inhomogeneity, nonlinear signal intensity changes of the images over the time course of data acquisition, appearances and shape changes (deformations) of the organ-of-interest during data acquisition, determination of the best features (indexes) that describe the perfusion of a contrast agent (CA) into the tissue. To address these challenges, this dissertation focuses on building new mathematical models and learning techniques that facilitate accurate analysis of CAs perfusion in living organs and include: (i) accurate mathematical models for the segmentation of the object-of-interest, which integrate object shape and appearance features in terms of pixel/voxel-wise image intensities and their spatial interactions; (ii) motion correction techniques that combine both global and local models, which exploit geometric features, rather than image intensities to avoid problems associated with nonlinear intensity variations of the CE images; (iii) fusion of multiple features using the genetic algorithm. The proposed techniques have been integrated into CAD systems that have been tested in, but not limited to, three clinical studies. First, a noninvasive CAD system is proposed for the early and accurate diagnosis of acute renal transplant rejection using dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI). Acute rejection–the immunological response of the human immune system to a foreign kidney–is the most sever cause of renal dysfunction among other diagnostic possibilities, including acute tubular necrosis and immune drug toxicity. In the U.S., approximately 17,736 renal transplants are performed annually, and given the limited number of donors, transplanted kidney salvage is an important medical concern. Thus far, biopsy remains the gold standard for the assessment of renal transplant dysfunction, but only as the last resort because of its invasive nature, high cost, and potential morbidity rates. The diagnostic results of the proposed CAD system, based on the analysis of 50 independent in-vivo cases were 96% with a 95% confidence interval. These results clearly demonstrate the promise of the proposed image-based diagnostic CAD system as a supplement to the current technologies, such as nuclear imaging and ultrasonography, to determine the type of kidney dysfunction. Second, a comprehensive CAD system is developed for the characterization of myocardial perfusion and clinical status in heart failure and novel myoregeneration therapy using cardiac first-pass MRI (FP-MRI). Heart failure is considered the most important cause of morbidity and mortality in cardiovascular disease, which affects approximately 6 million U.S. patients annually. Ischemic heart disease is considered the most common underlying cause of heart failure. Therefore, the detection of the heart failure in its earliest forms is essential to prevent its relentless progression to premature death. While current medical studies focus on detecting pathological tissue and assessing contractile function of the diseased heart, this dissertation address the key issue of the effects of the myoregeneration therapy on the associated blood nutrient supply. Quantitative and qualitative assessment in a cohort of 24 perfusion data sets demonstrated the ability of the proposed framework to reveal regional perfusion improvements with therapy, and transmural perfusion differences across the myocardial wall; thus, it can aid in follow-up on treatment for patients undergoing the myoregeneration therapy. Finally, an image-based CAD system for early detection of prostate cancer using DCE-MRI is introduced. Prostate cancer is the most frequently diagnosed malignancy among men and remains the second leading cause of cancer-related death in the USA with more than 238,000 new cases and a mortality rate of about 30,000 in 2013. Therefore, early diagnosis of prostate cancer can improve the effectiveness of treatment and increase the patient’s chance of survival. Currently, needle biopsy is the gold standard for the diagnosis of prostate cancer. However, it is an invasive procedure with high costs and potential morbidity rates. Additionally, it has a higher possibility of producing false positive diagnosis due to relatively small needle biopsy samples. Application of the proposed CAD yield promising results in a cohort of 30 patients that would, in the near future, represent a supplement of the current technologies to determine prostate cancer type. The developed techniques have been compared to the state-of-the-art methods and demonstrated higher accuracy as shown in this dissertation. The proposed models (higher-order spatial interaction models, shape models, motion correction models, and perfusion analysis models) can be used in many of today’s CAD applications for early detection of a variety of diseases and medical conditions, and are expected to notably amplify the accuracy of CAD decisions based on the automated analysis of CE images
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