37 research outputs found

    Phase- and GVF-Based Level Set Segmentation of Ultrasonic Breast Tumors

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    Automatically extracting breast tumor boundaries in ultrasound images is a difficult task due to the speckle noise, the low image contrast, the variance in shapes, and the local changes of image intensity. In this paper, an improved edge-based active contour model in a variational level set formulation is proposed for semi-automatically capturing ultrasonic breast tumor boundaries. First, we apply the phase asymmetry approach to enhance the edges, and then we define a new edge stopping function, which can increase the robustness to the intensity inhomogeneities. To extend the capture range of the method and provide good convergence to boundary concavities, we use the phase information to obtain an improved edge map, which can be used to calculate the gradient vector flow (GVF). Combining the edge stopping term and the improved GVF in the level set framework, the proposed method can robustly cope with noise, and it can extract the low contrast and/or concave boundaries well. Experiments on breast ultrasound images show that the proposed method outperforms the state-of-art methods

    Novel 3D Ultrasound Elastography Techniques for In Vivo Breast Tumor Imaging and Nonlinear Characterization

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    Breast cancer comprises about 29% of all types of cancer in women worldwide. This type of cancer caused what is equivalent to 14% of all female deaths due to cancer. Nowadays, tissue biopsy is routinely performed, although about 80% of the performed biopsies yield a benign result. Biopsy is considered the most costly part of breast cancer examination and invasive in nature. To reduce unnecessary biopsy procedures and achieve early diagnosis, ultrasound elastography was proposed.;In this research, tissue displacement fields were estimated using ultrasound waves, and used to infer the elastic properties of tissues. Ultrasound radiofrequency data acquired at consecutive increments of tissue compression were used to compute local tissue strains using a cross correlation method. In vitro and in vivo experiments were conducted on different tissue types to demonstrate the ability to construct 2D and 3D elastography that helps distinguish stiff from soft tissues. Based on the constructed strain volumes, a novel nonlinear classification method for human breast tumors is introduced. Multi-compression elastography imaging is elucidated in this study to differentiate malignant from benign tumors, based on their nonlinear mechanical behavior under compression. A pilot study on ten patients was performed in vivo, and classification results were compared with biopsy diagnosis - the gold standard. Various nonlinear parameters based on different models, were evaluated and compared with two commonly used parameters; relative stiffness and relative tumor size. Moreover, different types of strain components were constructed in 3D for strain imaging, including normal axial, first principal, maximum shear and Von Mises strains. Interactive segmentation algorithms were also evaluated and applied on the constructed volumes, to delineate the stiff tissue by showing its isolated 3D shape.;Elastography 3D imaging results were in good agreement with the biopsy outcomes, where the new classification method showed a degree of discrepancy between benign and malignant tumors better than the commonly used parameters. The results show that the nonlinear parameters were found to be statistically significant with p-value \u3c0.05. Moreover, one parameter; power-law exponent, was highly statistically significant having p-value \u3c 0.001. Additionally, volumetric strain images reconstructed using the maximum shear strains provided an enhanced tumor\u27s boundary from the surrounding soft tissues. This edge enhancement improved the overall segmentation performance, and diminished the boundary leakage effect. 3D segmentation provided an additional reliable means to determine the tumor\u27s size by estimating its volume.;In summary, the proposed elastographic techniques can help predetermine the tumor\u27s type, shape and size that are considered key features helping the physician to decide the sort and extent of the treatment. The methods can also be extended to diagnose other types of tumors, such as prostate and cervical tumors. This research is aimed toward the development of a novel \u27virtual biopsy\u27 method that may reduce the number of unnecessary painful biopsies, and diminish the increasingly risk of cancer

    Breast Ultra-Sound image segmentation: an optimization approach based on super-pixels and high-level descriptors

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    International audienceBreast cancer is the second most common cancer and the leading cause of cancer death among women. Medical imaging has become an indispensable tool for its diagnosis and follow up. During the last decade, the medical community has promoted to incorporate Ultra-Sound (US) screening as part of the standard routine. The main reason for using US imaging is its capability to differentiate benign from malignant masses, when compared to other imaging techniques. The increasing usage of US imaging encourages the development of Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) systems applied to Breast Ultra-Sound (BUS) images. However accurate delineations of the lesions and structures of the breast are essential for CAD systems in order to extract information needed to perform diagnosis. This article proposes a highly modular and flexible framework for segmenting lesions and tissues present in BUS images. The proposal takes advantage of optimization strategies using super-pixels and high-level de-scriptors, which are analogous to the visual cues used by radiologists. Qualitative and quantitative results are provided stating a performance within the range of the state-of-the-art

    A Novel Segmentation Approach Combining Region- and Edge-Based Information for Ultrasound Images

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    Ultrasound imaging has become one of the most popular medical imaging modalities with numerous diagnostic applications. However, ultrasound (US) image segmentation, which is the essential process for further analysis, is a challenging task due to the poor image quality

    Breast ultrasound lesions recognition::end-to-end deep learning approaches

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    Multistage processing of automated breast ultrasound lesions recognition is dependent on the performance of prior stages. To improve the current state of the art, we propose the use of end-to-end deep learning approaches using fully convolutional networks (FCNs), namely FCN-AlexNet, FCN-32s, FCN-16s, and FCN-8s for semantic segmentation of breast lesions. We use pretrained models based on ImageNet and transfer learning to overcome the issue of data deficiency. We evaluate our results on two datasets, which consist of a total of 113 malignant and 356 benign lesions. To assess the performance, we conduct fivefold cross validation using the following split: 70% for training data, 10% for validation data, and 20% testing data. The results showed that our proposed method performed better on benign lesions, with a top "mean Dice" score of 0.7626 with FCN-16s, when compared with the malignant lesions with a top mean Dice score of 0.5484 with FCN-8s. When considering the number of images with Dice score >0.5 , 89.6% of the benign lesions were successfully segmented and correctly recognised, whereas 60.6% of the malignant lesions were successfully segmented and correctly recognized. We conclude the paper by addressing the future challenges of the work

    Comparison of Three Segmentation Methods for Breast Ultrasound Images based on Level Set and Morphological Operations

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    Breast cancer is one of the major causes of death among women all over the world. The most frequently used diagnosis tool to detect breast cancer is ultrasound. However, to segment the breast ultrasound images is a difficult thing. Some studies show that the active contour models have been proved to be the most successful methods for medical image segmentation. The level set method is a class of curve evolution methods based on the geometric active contour model. Morphological operation describes a range of image processing technique that deal with the shape of features in an image. Morphological operations are applied to remove imperfections that introduced during segmentation. In this paper, we have evaluated three level set methods that combined with morphological operations to segment the breast lesions. The level set methods that used in our research are the Chan Vese (C-V) model, the Selective Binary and Gaussian Filtering Regularized Level Set (SBGFRLS) model and the Distance Regularized Level Set Evolution (DRLSE) model. Furthermore, to evaluate the method, we compared the segmented breast lesion that obtained by each method with the lesion that obtained manually by radiologists. The evaluation is done by four metrics: Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC), True-Positive Ratio (TPR), True-Negative Ratio (TNR), and Accuracy (ACC). Our experimental results with 30 breast ultrasound images showed that the C-V model that combined with morphological operations have better performance than the other two methods according to mean value of DSC metrics

    Neutro-Connectedness Theory, Algorithms and Applications

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    Connectedness is an important topological property and has been widely studied in digital topology. However, three main challenges exist in applying connectedness to solve real world problems: (1) the definitions of connectedness based on the classic and fuzzy logic cannot model the “hidden factors” that could influence our decision-making; (2) these definitions are too general to be applied to solve complex problem; and (4) many measurements of connectedness are heavily dependent on the shape (spatial distribution of vertices) of the graph and violate the intuitive idea of connectedness. This research focused on solving these challenges by redesigning the connectedness theory, developing fast algorithms for connectedness computation, and applying the newly proposed theory and algorithms to solve challenges in real problems. The newly proposed Neutro-Connectedness (NC) generalizes the conventional definitions of connectedness and can model uncertainty and describe the part and the whole relationship. By applying the dynamic programming strategy, a fast algorithm was proposed to calculate NC for general dataset. It is not just calculating NC map, and the output NC forest can discover a dataset’s topological structure regarding connectedness. In the first application, interactive image segmentation, two approaches were proposed to solve the two most difficult challenges: user interaction-dependence and intense interaction. The first approach, named NC-Cut, models global topologic property among image regions and reduces the dependence of segmentation performance on the appearance models generated by user interactions. It is less sensitive to the initial region of interest (ROI) than four state-of-the-art ROI-based methods. The second approach, named EISeg, provides user with visual clues to guide the interacting process based on NC. It reduces user interaction greatly by guiding user to where interacting can produce the best segmentation results. In the second application, NC was utilized to solve the challenge of weak boundary problem in breast ultrasound image segmentation. The approach can model the indeterminacy resulted from weak boundaries better than fuzzy connectedness, and achieved more accurate and robust result on our dataset with 131 breast tumor cases

    Contributions à la segmentation d'image : phase locale et modèles statistiques

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    Ce document presente une synthèse de mes travaux apres these, principalement sur la problematique de la segmentation d’images
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