160 research outputs found
Human treelike tubular structure segmentation: A comprehensive review and future perspectives
Various structures in human physiology follow a treelike morphology, which often expresses complexity at very fine scales. Examples of such structures are intrathoracic airways, retinal blood vessels, and hepatic blood vessels. Large collections of 2D and 3D images have been made available by medical imaging modalities such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), Optical coherence tomography (OCT) and ultrasound in which the spatial arrangement can be observed. Segmentation of these structures in medical imaging is of great importance since the analysis of the structure provides insights into disease diagnosis, treatment planning, and prognosis. Manually labelling extensive data by radiologists is often time-consuming and error-prone. As a result, automated or semi-automated computational models have become a popular research field of medical imaging in the past two decades, and many have been developed to date. In this survey, we aim to provide a comprehensive review of currently publicly available datasets, segmentation algorithms, and evaluation metrics. In addition, current challenges and future research directions are discussed
Extracting Tree-structures in CT data by Tracking Multiple Statistically Ranked Hypotheses
In this work, we adapt a method based on multiple hypothesis tracking (MHT)
that has been shown to give state-of-the-art vessel segmentation results in
interactive settings, for the purpose of extracting trees. Regularly spaced
tubular templates are fit to image data forming local hypotheses. These local
hypotheses are used to construct the MHT tree, which is then traversed to make
segmentation decisions. However, some critical parameters in this method are
scale-dependent and have an adverse effect when tracking structures of varying
dimensions. We propose to use statistical ranking of local hypotheses in
constructing the MHT tree, which yields a probabilistic interpretation of
scores across scales and helps alleviate the scale-dependence of MHT
parameters. This enables our method to track trees starting from a single seed
point. Our method is evaluated on chest CT data to extract airway trees and
coronary arteries. In both cases, we show that our method performs
significantly better than the original MHT method.Comment: Accepted for publication at the International Journal of Medical
Physics and Practic
Human Treelike Tubular Structure Segmentation: A Comprehensive Review and Future Perspectives
Various structures in human physiology follow a treelike morphology, which
often expresses complexity at very fine scales. Examples of such structures are
intrathoracic airways, retinal blood vessels, and hepatic blood vessels. Large
collections of 2D and 3D images have been made available by medical imaging
modalities such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT),
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) and ultrasound in which the spatial
arrangement can be observed. Segmentation of these structures in medical
imaging is of great importance since the analysis of the structure provides
insights into disease diagnosis, treatment planning, and prognosis. Manually
labelling extensive data by radiologists is often time-consuming and
error-prone. As a result, automated or semi-automated computational models have
become a popular research field of medical imaging in the past two decades, and
many have been developed to date. In this survey, we aim to provide a
comprehensive review of currently publicly available datasets, segmentation
algorithms, and evaluation metrics. In addition, current challenges and future
research directions are discussed.Comment: 30 pages, 19 figures, submitted to CBM journa
A Survey on Deep Learning in Medical Image Analysis
Deep learning algorithms, in particular convolutional networks, have rapidly
become a methodology of choice for analyzing medical images. This paper reviews
the major deep learning concepts pertinent to medical image analysis and
summarizes over 300 contributions to the field, most of which appeared in the
last year. We survey the use of deep learning for image classification, object
detection, segmentation, registration, and other tasks and provide concise
overviews of studies per application area. Open challenges and directions for
future research are discussed.Comment: Revised survey includes expanded discussion section and reworked
introductory section on common deep architectures. Added missed papers from
before Feb 1st 201
Graph Refinement based Airway Extraction using Mean-Field Networks and Graph Neural Networks
Graph refinement, or the task of obtaining subgraphs of interest from
over-complete graphs, can have many varied applications. In this work, we
extract trees or collection of sub-trees from image data by, first deriving a
graph-based representation of the volumetric data and then, posing the tree
extraction as a graph refinement task. We present two methods to perform graph
refinement. First, we use mean-field approximation (MFA) to approximate the
posterior density over the subgraphs from which the optimal subgraph of
interest can be estimated. Mean field networks (MFNs) are used for inference
based on the interpretation that iterations of MFA can be seen as feed-forward
operations in a neural network. This allows us to learn the model parameters
using gradient descent. Second, we present a supervised learning approach using
graph neural networks (GNNs) which can be seen as generalisations of MFNs.
Subgraphs are obtained by training a GNN-based graph refinement model to
directly predict edge probabilities. We discuss connections between the two
classes of methods and compare them for the task of extracting airways from 3D,
low-dose, chest CT data. We show that both the MFN and GNN models show
significant improvement when compared to one baseline method, that is similar
to a top performing method in the EXACT'09 Challenge, and a 3D U-Net based
airway segmentation model, in detecting more branches with fewer false
positives.Comment: Accepted for publication at Medical Image Analysis. 14 page
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