425 research outputs found

    Silver Standard Masks for Data Augmentation Applied to Deep-Learning-Based Skull-Stripping

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    The bottleneck of convolutional neural networks (CNN) for medical imaging is the number of annotated data required for training. Manual segmentation is considered to be the "gold-standard". However, medical imaging datasets with expert manual segmentation are scarce as this step is time-consuming and expensive. We propose in this work the use of what we refer to as silver standard masks for data augmentation in deep-learning-based skull-stripping also known as brain extraction. We generated the silver standard masks using the consensus algorithm Simultaneous Truth and Performance Level Estimation (STAPLE). We evaluated CNN models generated by the silver and gold standard masks. Then, we validated the silver standard masks for CNNs training in one dataset, and showed its generalization to two other datasets. Our results indicated that models generated with silver standard masks are comparable to models generated with gold standard masks and have better generalizability. Moreover, our results also indicate that silver standard masks could be used to augment the input dataset at training stage, reducing the need for manual segmentation at this step

    TBI lesion segmentation in head CT: impact of preprocessing and data augmentation

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    Automatic segmentation of lesions in head CT provides keyinformation for patient management, prognosis and disease monitoring.Despite its clinical importance, method development has mostly focusedon multi-parametric MRI. Analysis of the brain in CT is challengingdue to limited soft tissue contrast and its mono-modal nature. We studythe under-explored problem of fine-grained CT segmentation of multiplelesion types (core, blood, oedema) in traumatic brain injury (TBI). Weobserve that preprocessing and data augmentation choices greatly impactthe segmentation accuracy of a neural network, yet these factors arerarely thoroughly assessed in prior work. We design an empirical studythat extensively evaluates the impact of different data preprocessing andaugmentation methods. We show that these choices can have an impactof up to 18% DSC. We conclude that resampling to isotropic resolutionyields improved performance, skull-stripping can be replaced by using theright intensity window, and affine-to-atlas registration is not necessaryif we use sufficient spatial augmentation. Since both skull-stripping andaffine-to-atlas registration are susceptible to failure, we recommend theiralternatives to be used in practice. We believe this is the first work toreport results for fine-grained multi-class segmentation of TBI in CT. Ourfindings may inform further research in this under-explored yet clinicallyimportant task of automatic head CT lesion segmentation

    Brain Tumor Detection and Classification from MRI Images

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    A brain tumor is detected and classified by biopsy that is conducted after the brain surgery. Advancement in technology and machine learning techniques could help radiologists in the diagnosis of tumors without any invasive measures. We utilized a deep learning-based approach to detect and classify the tumor into Meningioma, Glioma, Pituitary tumors. We used registration and segmentation-based skull stripping mechanism to remove the skull from the MRI images and the grab cut method to verify whether the skull stripped MRI masks retained the features of the tumor for accurate classification. In this research, we proposed a transfer learning based approach in conjunction with discriminative learning rates to perform the classification of brain tumors. The data set used is a 3064 T MRI images dataset that contains T1 flair MRI images. We achieved a classification accuracy of 98.83%, 96.26%, and 95.18% for training, validation, and test sets and an F1 score of 0.96 on the T1 Flair MRI dataset

    2D and 3D U-Nets for skull stripping in a large and heterogeneous set of head MRI using fastai

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    Skull stripping in brain imaging is the removal of the parts of images corresponding to non-brain tissue. Fast and accurate skull stripping is a crucial step for numerous medical brain imaging applications, e.g. registration, segmentation and feature extraction, as it eases subsequent image processing steps. In this work, we propose and compare two novel skull stripping methods based on 2D and 3D convolutional neural networks trained on a large, heterogeneous collection of 2777 clinical 3D T1-weighted MRI images from 1681 healthy subjects. We investigated the performance of the models by testing them on 927 images from 324 subjects set aside from our collection of data, in addition to images from an independent, large brain imaging study: the IXI dataset (n = 556). Our models achieved mean Dice scores higher than 0:978 and Jaccard indices higher than 0:957 on all tests sets, making predictions on new unseen brain MR images in approximately 1.4s for the 3D model and 12.4s for the 2D model. A preliminary exploration of the models’ robustness to variation in the input data showed favourable results when compared to a traditional, well-established skull stripping method. With further research aimed at increasing the models’ robustness, such accurate
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