66 research outputs found

    Lumen-intima and media-adventitia segmentation in IVUS images using supervised classifications of arterial layers and morphological structures

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    Background: Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) provides axial grey-scale images of blood vessels. The large number of images require automatic analysis, specifically to identify the lumen and outer vessel wall. However, the high amount of noise, the presence of artifacts and anatomical structures, such as bifurcations, calcifications and fibrotic plaques, usually hinder the proper automatic segmentation of the vessel wall. Methods: Lumen, media, adventitia and surrounding tissues are automatically detected using Support Vector Machines (SVMs). The classification performance of the SVMs vary according to the kind of structure present within each region of the image. Random Forest (RF) is used to detect different morphological structures and to modify the initial layer classification depending on the detected structure. The resulting classification maps are fed into a segmentation method based on deformable contours to detect lumen-intima (LI) and media-adventitia (MA) interfaces. Results: The modifications in the layer classifications according to the presence of structures proved to be effective improving LI and MA segmentations. The proposed method reaches a Jaccard Measure (JM) of 0.88 ± 0.08 for LI segmentation, compared with 0.88 ± 0.05 of a semiautomatic method. When looking at MA, our method reaches a JM of 0.84 ± 0.09, and outperforms previous automatic methods in terms of HD, with 0.51mm ± 0.30. Conclusions: A simple modification to the arterial layer classification produces results that match and improve state-of-the-art fully-automatic segmentation methods for LI and MA in 20MHz IVUS images. For LI segmentation, the proposed automatic method performs accurately as semi-automatic methods. For MA segmentation, our method matched the quality of state-of-the-art automatic methods described in the literature. Furthermore, our implementation is modular and open-source, allowing for future extensions and improvements.Fil: Lo Vercio, Lucas. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Grupo de Plasmas Densos Magnetizados. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comision de Investigaciones Científicas. Grupo de Plasmas Densos Magnetizados; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Tandil; ArgentinaFil: del Fresno, Mirta Mariana. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Grupo de Plasmas Densos Magnetizados. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comision de Investigaciones Científicas. Grupo de Plasmas Densos Magnetizados; ArgentinaFil: Larrabide, Ignacio. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Grupo de Plasmas Densos Magnetizados. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comision de Investigaciones Científicas. Grupo de Plasmas Densos Magnetizados; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Tandil; Argentin

    Thin Cap Fibroatheroma Detection in Virtual Histology Images Using Geometric and Texture Features

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    Atherosclerotic plaque rupture is the most common mechanism responsible for a majority of sudden coronary deaths. The precursor lesion of plaque rupture is thought to be a thin cap fibroatheroma (TCFA), or “vulnerable plaque”. Virtual Histology-Intravascular Ultrasound (VH-IVUS) images are clinically available for visualising colour-coded coronary artery tissue. However, it has limitations in terms of providing clinically relevant information for identifying vulnerable plaque. The aim of this research is to improve the identification of TCFA using VH-IVUS images. To more accurately segment VH-IVUS images, a semi-supervised model is developed by means of hybrid K-means with Particle Swarm Optimisation (PSO) and a minimum Euclidean distance algorithm (KMPSO-mED). Another novelty of the proposed method is fusion of different geometric and informative texture features to capture the varying heterogeneity of plaque components and compute a discriminative index for TCFA plaque, while the existing research on TCFA detection has only focused on the geometric features. Three commonly used statistical texture features are extracted from VH-IVUS images: Local Binary Patterns (LBP), Grey Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM), and Modified Run Length (MRL). Geometric and texture features are concatenated in order to generate complex descriptors. Finally, Back Propagation Neural Network (BPNN), kNN (K-Nearest Neighbour), and Support Vector Machine (SVM) classifiers are applied to select the best classifier for classifying plaque into TCFA and Non-TCFA. The present study proposes a fast and accurate computer-aided method for plaque type classification. The proposed method is applied to 588 VH-IVUS images obtained from 10 patients. The results prove the superiority of the proposed method, with accuracy rates of 98.61% for TCFA plaque.This research was funded by Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM) under Research University Grant Vot-02G31, and the Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia (MOHE) under the Fundamental Research Grant Scheme (FRGS Vot-4F551) for the completion of the research. The work and the contribution were also supported by the project Smart Solutions in Ubiquitous Computing Environments, Grant Agency of Excellence, University of Hradec Kralove, Faculty of Informatics and Management, Czech Republic (under ID: UHK-FIM-GE-2018). Furthermore, the research is also partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities with FEDER funds in the project TIN2016-75850-R

    Deep Learning in Cardiology

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    The medical field is creating large amount of data that physicians are unable to decipher and use efficiently. Moreover, rule-based expert systems are inefficient in solving complicated medical tasks or for creating insights using big data. Deep learning has emerged as a more accurate and effective technology in a wide range of medical problems such as diagnosis, prediction and intervention. Deep learning is a representation learning method that consists of layers that transform the data non-linearly, thus, revealing hierarchical relationships and structures. In this review we survey deep learning application papers that use structured data, signal and imaging modalities from cardiology. We discuss the advantages and limitations of applying deep learning in cardiology that also apply in medicine in general, while proposing certain directions as the most viable for clinical use.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figures, 10 table

    Lumen contour segmentation in ivoct based on n-type cnn

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    Automatic segmentation of lumen contour plays an important role in medical imaging and diagnosis, which is the first step towards the evaluation of morphology of vessels under analysis and the identification of possible atherosclerotic lesions. Meanwhile, quantitative information can only be obtained with segmentation, contributing to the appearance of novel methods which can be successfully applied to intravascular optical coherence tomography (IVOCT) images. This paper proposed a new end-to-end neural network (N-Net) for the automatic lumen segmentation, using multi-scale features based deep neural network, for IVOCT images. The architecture of the N-Net contains a multi-scale input layer, a N-type convolution network layer and a cross-entropy loss function. The multi-scale input layer in the proposed N-Net is designed to avoid the loss of information caused by pooling in traditional U-Net and also enriches the detailed information in each layer. The N-type convolutional network is proposed as the framework in the whole deep architecture. Finally, the loss function guarantees the degree of fidelity between the output of proposed method and the manually labeled output. In order to enlarge the training set, data augmentation is also introduced. We evaluated our method against loss, accuracy, recall, dice similarity coefficient, jaccard similarity coefficient and specificity. The experimental results presented in this paper demonstrate the superior performance of the proposed N-Net architecture, comparing to some existing networks, for enhancing the precision of automatic lumen segmentation and increasing the detailed information of edges of the vascular lumen

    Self-supervised learning via inter-modal reconstruction and feature projection networks for label-efficient 3D-to-2D segmentation

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    Deep learning has become a valuable tool for the automation of certain medical image segmentation tasks, significantly relieving the workload of medical specialists. Some of these tasks require segmentation to be performed on a subset of the input dimensions, the most common case being 3D-to-2D. However, the performance of existing methods is strongly conditioned by the amount of labeled data available, as there is currently no data efficient method, e.g. transfer learning, that has been validated on these tasks. In this work, we propose a novel convolutional neural network (CNN) and self-supervised learning (SSL) method for label-efficient 3D-to-2D segmentation. The CNN is composed of a 3D encoder and a 2D decoder connected by novel 3D-to-2D blocks. The SSL method consists of reconstructing image pairs of modalities with different dimensionality. The approach has been validated in two tasks with clinical relevance: the en-face segmentation of geographic atrophy and reticular pseudodrusen in optical coherence tomography. Results on different datasets demonstrate that the proposed CNN significantly improves the state of the art in scenarios with limited labeled data by up to 8% in Dice score. Moreover, the proposed SSL method allows further improvement of this performance by up to 23%, and we show that the SSL is beneficial regardless of the network architecture.Comment: To appear in MICCAI 2023. Code: https://github.com/j-morano/multimodal-ssl-fp
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