13 research outputs found

    Early and accurate detection of melanoma skin cancer using hybrid level set approach

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    Digital dermoscopy is used to identify cancer in skin lesions, and sun exposure is one of the leading causes of melanoma. It is crucial to distinguish between healthy skin and malignant lesions when using computerised lesion detection and classification. Lesion segmentation influences categorization accuracy and precision. This study introduces a novel way of classifying lesions. Hair filters, gel, bubbles, and specular reflection are all options. An improved levelling method is employed in an innovative method for detecting and removing cancerous hairs. The lesion is distinguished from the surrounding skin by the adaptive sigmoidal function; this function considers the severity of localised lesions. An improved technique for identifying a lesion from surrounding tissue is proposed in the article, followed by a classifier and available features that resulted in 94.40% accuracy and 93% success. According to research, the best method for selecting features and classifications can produce more accurate predictions before and during treatment. When the recommended strategy is put to the test using the Melanoma Skin Cancer Dataset, the recommended technique outperforms the alternative

    UNRAVELLING DIABETIC RETINOPATHY THROUGH IMAGE PROCESSING, NEURAL NETWORKS AND FUZZY LOGIC – A REVIEW

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    One of the main causes of blindness is diabetic retinopathy (DR) and it may affect people of any ages. In these days, both young and old ages are affected by diabetes, and the di abetes is the main cause of DR. Hence, it is necessary to have an automated system with good accuracy and less computation time to diagnose and treat DR, and the automated system can simplify the work of ophthalmologists. The objective is to present an overview of various works recently in detecting and segmenting the various lesions of DR. Papers were categorized based on the diagnosing tools and the methods used for detecting early and advanced stage lesions. The early lesions of DR are microaneurysms, hemorrhages, exudates, and cotton wool spots and in the advanced stage, new and fragile blood vessels can be grown. Results have been evaluated in terms of sensitivity, specificity, accuracy and receiver operating characteristic curve. This paper analyzed the various steps and different algorithms used recently for the detection and classification of DR lesions. A comparison of performances has been made in terms of sensitivity, specificity, area under the curve, and accuracy. Suggestions, future workand the area to be improved were also discussed.Keywords: Diabetic retinopathy, Image processing, Morphological operations, Neural network, Fuzzy logic.Â

    Automatic detection of microaneurysms in colour fundus images for diabetic retinopathy screening.

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    Regular eye screening is essential for the early detection and treatment of the diabetic retinopathy. This paper presents a novel automatic screening system for diabetic retinopathy that focuses on the detection of the earliest visible signs of retinopathy, which are microaneurysms. Microaneurysms are small dots on the retina, formed by ballooning out of a weak part of the capillary wall. The detection of the microaneurysms at an early stage is vital, and it is the first step in preventing the diabetic retinopathy. The paper first explores the existing systems and applications related to diabetic retinopathy screening, with a focus on the microaneurysm detection methods. The proposed decision support system consists of an automatic acquisition, screening and classification of diabetic retinopathy colour fundus images, which could assist in the detection and management of the diabetic retinopathy. Several feature extraction methods and the circular Hough transform have been employed in the proposed microaneurysm detection system, alongside the fuzzy histogram equalisation method. The latter method has been applied in the preprocessing stage of the diabetic retinopathy eye fundus images and provided improved results for detecting the microaneurysms

    Segmentation and Characterization of Small Retinal Vessels in Fundus Images Using the Tensor Voting Approach

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    RÉSUMÉ La rétine permet de visualiser facilement une partie du réseau vasculaire humain. Elle offre ainsi un aperçu direct sur le développement et le résultat de certaines maladies liées au réseau vasculaire dans son entier. Chaque complication visible sur la rétine peut avoir un impact sur la capacité visuelle du patient. Les plus petits vaisseaux sanguins sont parmi les premières structures anatomiques affectées par la progression d’une maladie, être capable de les analyser est donc crucial. Les changements dans l’état, l’aspect, la morphologie, la fonctionnalité, ou même la croissance des petits vaisseaux indiquent la gravité des maladies. Le diabète est une maladie métabolique qui affecte des millions de personnes autour du monde. Cette maladie affecte le taux de glucose dans le sang et cause des changements pathologiques dans différents organes du corps humain. La rétinopathie diabétique décrit l’en- semble des conditions et conséquences du diabète au niveau de la rétine. Les petits vaisseaux jouent un rôle dans le déclenchement, le développement et les conséquences de la rétinopa- thie. Dans les dernières étapes de cette maladie, la croissance des nouveaux petits vaisseaux, appelée néovascularisation, présente un risque important de provoquer la cécité. Il est donc crucial de détecter tous les changements qui ont lieu dans les petits vaisseaux de la rétine dans le but de caractériser les vaisseaux sains et les vaisseaux anormaux. La caractérisation en elle-même peut faciliter la détection locale d’une rétinopathie spécifique. La segmentation automatique des structures anatomiques comme le réseau vasculaire est une étape cruciale. Ces informations peuvent être fournies à un médecin pour qu’elles soient considérées lors de son diagnostic. Dans les systèmes automatiques d’aide au diagnostic, le rôle des petits vaisseaux est significatif. Ne pas réussir à les détecter automatiquement peut conduire à une sur-segmentation du taux de faux positifs des lésions rouges dans les étapes ultérieures. Les efforts de recherche se sont concentrés jusqu’à présent sur la localisation précise des vaisseaux de taille moyenne. Les modèles existants ont beaucoup plus de difficultés à extraire les petits vaisseaux sanguins. Les modèles existants ne sont pas robustes à la grande variance d’apparence des vaisseaux ainsi qu’à l’interférence avec l’arrière-plan. Les modèles de la littérature existante supposent une forme générale qui n’est pas suffisante pour s’adapter à la largeur étroite et la courbure qui caractérisent les petits vaisseaux sanguins. De plus, le contraste avec l’arrière-plan dans les régions des petits vaisseaux est très faible. Les méthodes de segmentation ou de suivi produisent des résultats fragmentés ou discontinus. Par ailleurs, la segmentation des petits vaisseaux est généralement faite aux dépends de l’amplification du bruit. Les modèles déformables sont inadéquats pour segmenter les petits vaisseaux. Les forces utilisées ne sont pas assez flexibles pour compenser le faible contraste, la largeur, et vii la variance des vaisseaux. Enfin, les approches de type apprentissage machine nécessitent un entraînement avec une base de données étiquetée. Il est très difficile d’obtenir ces bases de données dans le cas des petits vaisseaux. Cette thèse étend les travaux de recherche antérieurs en fournissant une nouvelle mé- thode de segmentation des petits vaisseaux rétiniens. La détection de ligne à échelles multiples (MSLD) est une méthode récente qui démontre une bonne performance de segmentation dans les images de la rétine, tandis que le vote tensoriel est une méthode proposée pour reconnecter les pixels. Une approche combinant un algorithme de détection de ligne et de vote tensoriel est proposée. L’application des détecteurs de lignes a prouvé son efficacité à segmenter les vais- seaux de tailles moyennes. De plus, les approches d’organisation perceptuelle comme le vote tensoriel ont démontré une meilleure robustesse en combinant les informations voisines d’une manière hiérarchique. La méthode de vote tensoriel est plus proche de la perception humain que d’autres modèles standards. Comme démontré dans ce manuscrit, c’est un outil pour segmenter les petits vaisseaux plus puissant que les méthodes existantes. Cette combinaison spécifique nous permet de surmonter les défis de fragmentation éprouvés par les méthodes de type modèle déformable au niveau des petits vaisseaux. Nous proposons également d’utiliser un seuil adaptatif sur la réponse de l’algorithme de détection de ligne pour être plus robuste aux images non-uniformes. Nous illustrons également comment une combinaison des deux méthodes individuelles, à plusieurs échelles, est capable de reconnecter les vaisseaux sur des distances variables. Un algorithme de reconstruction des vaisseaux est également proposé. Cette dernière étape est nécessaire car l’information géométrique complète est requise pour pouvoir utiliser la segmentation dans un système d’aide au diagnostic. La segmentation a été validée sur une base de données d’images de fond d’oeil à haute résolution. Cette base contient des images manifestant une rétinopathie diabétique. La seg- mentation emploie des mesures de désaccord standards et aussi des mesures basées sur la perception. En considérant juste les petits vaisseaux dans les images de la base de données, l’amélioration dans le taux de sensibilité que notre méthode apporte par rapport à la méthode standard de détection multi-niveaux de lignes est de 6.47%. En utilisant les mesures basées sur la perception, l’amélioration est de 7.8%. Dans une seconde partie du manuscrit, nous proposons également une méthode pour caractériser les rétines saines ou anormales. Certaines images contiennent de la néovascula- risation. La caractérisation des vaisseaux en bonne santé ou anormale constitue une étape essentielle pour le développement d’un système d’aide au diagnostic. En plus des défis que posent les petits vaisseaux sains, les néovaisseaux démontrent eux un degré de complexité encore plus élevé. Ceux-ci forment en effet des réseaux de vaisseaux à la morphologie com- plexe et inhabituelle, souvent minces et à fortes courbures. Les travaux existants se limitent viii à l’utilisation de caractéristiques de premier ordre extraites des petits vaisseaux segmentés. Notre contribution est d’utiliser le vote tensoriel pour isoler les jonctions vasculaires et d’uti- liser ces jonctions comme points d’intérêts. Nous utilisons ensuite une statistique spatiale de second ordre calculée sur les jonctions pour caractériser les vaisseaux comme étant sains ou pathologiques. Notre méthode améliore la sensibilité de la caractérisation de 9.09% par rapport à une méthode de l’état de l’art. La méthode développée s’est révélée efficace pour la segmentation des vaisseaux réti- niens. Des tenseurs d’ordre supérieur ainsi que la mise en œuvre d’un vote par tenseur via un filtrage orientable pourraient être étudiés pour réduire davantage le temps d’exécution et résoudre les défis encore présents au niveau des jonctions vasculaires. De plus, la caractéri- sation pourrait être améliorée pour la détection de la rétinopathie proliférative en utilisant un apprentissage supervisé incluant des cas de rétinopathie diabétique non proliférative ou d’autres pathologies. Finalement, l’incorporation des méthodes proposées dans des systèmes d’aide au diagnostic pourrait favoriser le dépistage régulier pour une détection précoce des rétinopathies et d’autres pathologies oculaires dans le but de réduire la cessité au sein de la population.----------ABSTRACT As an easily accessible site for the direct observation of the circulation system, human retina can offer a unique insight into diseases development or outcome. Retinal vessels are repre- sentative of the general condition of the whole systematic circulation, and thus can act as a "window" to the status of the vascular network in the whole body. Each complication on the retina can have an adverse impact on the patient’s sight. In this direction, small vessels’ relevance is very high as they are among the first anatomical structures that get affected as diseases progress. Moreover, changes in the small vessels’ state, appearance, morphology, functionality, or even growth indicate the severity of the diseases. This thesis will focus on the retinal lesions due to diabetes, a serious metabolic disease affecting millions of people around the world. This disorder disturbs the natural blood glucose levels causing various pathophysiological changes in different systems across the human body. Diabetic retinopathy is the medical term that describes the condition when the fundus and the retinal vessels are affected by diabetes. As in other diseases, small vessels play a crucial role in the onset, the development, and the outcome of the retinopathy. More importantly, at the latest stage, new small vessels, or neovascularizations, growth constitutes a factor of significant risk for blindness. Therefore, there is a need to detect all the changes that occur in the small retinal vessels with the aim of characterizing the vessels to healthy or abnormal. The characterization, in turn, can facilitate the detection of a specific retinopathy locally, like the sight-threatening proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Segmentation techniques can automatically isolate important anatomical structures like the vessels, and provide this information to the physician to assist him in the final decision. In comprehensive systems for the automatization of DR detection, small vessels role is significant as missing them early in a CAD pipeline might lead to an increase in the false positive rate of red lesions in subsequent steps. So far, the efforts have been concentrated mostly on the accurate localization of the medium range vessels. In contrast, the existing models are weak in case of the small vessels. The required generalization to adapt an existing model does not allow the approaches to be flexible, yet robust to compensate for the increased variability in the appearance as well as the interference with the background. So far, the current template models (matched filtering, line detection, and morphological processing) assume a general shape for the vessels that is not enough to approximate the narrow, curved, characteristics of the small vessels. Additionally, due to the weak contrast in the small vessel regions, the current segmentation and the tracking methods produce fragmented or discontinued results. Alternatively, the small vessel segmentation can be accomplished at the expense of x background noise magnification, in the case of using thresholding or the image derivatives methods. Furthermore, the proposed deformable models are not able to propagate a contour to the full extent of the vasculature in order to enclose all the small vessels. The deformable model external forces are ineffective to compensate for the low contrast, the low width, the high variability in the small vessel appearance, as well as the discontinuities. Internal forces, also, are not able to impose a global shape constraint to the contour that could be able to approximate the variability in the appearance of the vasculature in different categories of vessels. Finally, machine learning approaches require the training of a classifier on a labelled set. Those sets are difficult to be obtained, especially in the case of the smallest vessels. In the case of the unsupervised methods, the user has to predefine the number of clusters and perform an effective initialization of the cluster centers in order to converge to the global minimum. This dissertation expanded the previous research work and provides a new segmentation method for the smallest retinal vessels. Multi-scale line detection (MSLD) is a recent method that demonstrates good segmentation performance in the retinal images, while tensor voting is a method first proposed for reconnecting pixels. For the first time, we combined the line detection with the tensor voting framework. The application of the line detectors has been proved an effective way to segment medium-sized vessels. Additionally, perceptual organization approaches like tensor voting, demonstrate increased robustness by combining information coming from the neighborhood in a hierarchical way. Tensor voting is closer than standard models to the way human perception functions. As we show, it is a more powerful tool to segment small vessels than the existing methods. This specific combination allows us to overcome the apparent fragmentation challenge of the template methods at the smallest vessels. Moreover, we thresholded the line detection response adaptively to compensate for non-uniform images. We also combined the two individual methods in a multi-scale scheme in order to reconnect vessels at variable distances. Finally, we reconstructed the vessels from their extracted centerlines based on pixel painting as complete geometric information is required to be able to utilize the segmentation in a CAD system. The segmentation was validated on a high-resolution fundus image database that in- cludes diabetic retinopathy images of varying stages, using standard discrepancy as well as perceptual-based measures. When only the smallest vessels are considered, the improve- ments in the sensitivity rate for the database against the standard multi-scale line detection method is 6.47%. For the perceptual-based measure, the improvement is 7.8% against the basic method. The second objective of the thesis was to implement a method for the characterization of isolated retinal areas into healthy or abnormal cases. Some of the original images, from which xi these patches are extracted, contain neovascularizations. Investigation of image features for the vessels characterization to healthy or abnormal constitutes an essential step in the direction of developing CAD system for the automatization of DR screening. Given that the amount of data will significantly increase under CAD systems, the focus on this category of vessels can facilitate the referral of sight-threatening cases to early treatment. In addition to the challenges that small healthy vessels pose, neovessels demonstrate an even higher degree of complexity as they form networks of convolved, twisted, looped thin vessels. The existing work is limited to the use of first-order characteristics extracted from the small segmented vessels that limits the study of patterns. Our contribution is in using the tensor voting framework to isolate the retinal vascular junctions and in turn using those junctions as points of interests. Second, we exploited second-order statistics computed on the junction spatial distribution to characterize the vessels as healthy or neovascularizations. In fact, the second-order spatial statistics extracted from the junction distribution are combined with widely used features to improve the characterization sensitivity by 9.09% over the state of art. The developed method proved effective for the segmentation of the retinal vessels. Higher order tensors along with the implementation of tensor voting via steerable filtering could be employed to further reduce the execution time, and resolve the challenges at vascular junctions. Moreover, the characterization could be advanced to the detection of prolifera- tive retinopathy by extending the supervised learning to include non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy cases or other pathologies. Ultimately, the incorporation of the methods into CAD systems could facilitate screening for the effective reduction of the vision-threatening diabetic retinopathy rates, or the early detection of other than ocular pathologies

    Continuous Eye Disease Severity Evaluation System using Siamese Neural Networks

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    Evaluating the severity of eye diseases using medical images is a very essential and routine task performed in medical diagnosis and treatment. Current grading systems which are largely based on discrete classification are unreliable and do reflect not the entire spectrum of eye disease severity. The unreliability of discrete classification systems for eye diseases is clear, as classification is subjective and done based on the personal opinion of various medical experts, which may vary. In a bid to solve these issues, this study proposes a system for determining the severity of eye diseases on a continuous range using a twin-convoluted neural network approach known as Siamese Neural Networks. This system is demonstrated in the domain of diabetic retinopathy. Samples of retinal fundus images from an eye clinic in India are taken as test cases to evaluate the performance of a Siamese Triplet network which attempts to find the distance between their image embedding. The outputs of the Siamese network when a reference image is juxtaposed with a collection of images with distant severity categories (negative images), as well as when two reference images are compared to each other, are found to have a positive correlation (95\%) with originally assigned severity classes. Hence, these outputs indicate a continuous range of the severity and change in eye diseases

    Automatic detection of glaucoma via fundus imaging and artificial intelligence: A review.

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    Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible vision impairment globally, and cases are continuously rising worldwide. Early detection is crucial, allowing timely intervention that can prevent further visual field loss. To detect glaucoma, examination of the optic nerve head via fundus imaging can be performed, at the center of which is the assessment of the optic cup and disc boundaries. Fundus imaging is non-invasive and low-cost; however, the image examination relies on subjective, time-consuming, and costly expert assessments. A timely question to ask is: "Can artificial intelligence mimic glaucoma assessments made by experts?". Specifically, can artificial intelligence automatically find the boundaries of the optic cup and disc (providing a so-called segmented fundus image) and then use the segmented image to identify glaucoma with high accuracy? We conducted a comprehensive review on artificial intelligence-enabled glaucoma detection frameworks that produce and use segmented fundus images and summarized the advantages and disadvantages of such frameworks. We identified 36 relevant papers from 2011-2021 and 2 main approaches: 1) logical rule-based frameworks, based on a set of rules; and 2) machine learning/statistical modelling based frameworks. We critically evaluated the state-of-art of the 2 approaches, identified gaps in the literature and pointed at areas for future research

    Automatic Screening and Classification of Diabetic Retinopathy Eye Fundus Image

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    Diabetic Retinopathy (DR) is a disorder of the retinal vasculature. It develops to some degree in nearly all patients with long-standing diabetes mellitus and can result in blindness. Screening of DR is essential for both early detection and early treatment. This thesis aims to investigate automatic methods for diabetic retinopathy detection and subsequently develop an effective system for the detection and screening of diabetic retinopathy. The presented diabetic retinopathy research involves three development stages. Firstly, the thesis presents the development of a preliminary classification and screening system for diabetic retinopathy using eye fundus images. The research will then focus on the detection of the earliest signs of diabetic retinopathy, which are the microaneurysms. The detection of microaneurysms at an early stage is vital and is the first step in preventing diabetic retinopathy. Finally, the thesis will present decision support systems for the detection of diabetic retinopathy and maculopathy in eye fundus images. The detection of maculopathy, which are yellow lesions near the macula, is essential as it will eventually cause the loss of vision if the affected macula is not treated in time. An accurate retinal screening, therefore, is required to assist the retinal screeners to classify the retinal images effectively. Highly efficient and accurate image processing techniques must thus be used in order to produce an effective screening of diabetic retinopathy. In addition to the proposed diabetic retinopathy detection systems, this thesis will present a new dataset, and will highlight the dataset collection, the expert diagnosis process and the advantages of the new dataset, compared to other public eye fundus images datasets available. The new dataset will be useful to researchers and practitioners working in the retinal imaging area and would widely encourage comparative studies in the field of diabetic retinopathy research. It is envisaged that the proposed decision support system for clinical screening would greatly contribute to and assist the management and the detection of diabetic retinopathy. It is also hoped that the developed automatic detection techniques will assist clinicians to diagnose diabetic retinopathy at an early stage
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