3 research outputs found

    EARLY DIAGNOSIS OF DIABETIC RETINOPATHY BY THE DETECTION OF MICROANEURYSMS IN FUNDUS IMAGES

    Get PDF
    The detection of microaneurysms is crucial, as it is an early indicator of a complication of prolonged diabetes called Diabetic Retinopathy. In this paper, an automated approach is proposed to detect microaneurysms from retinal fundus images. Firstly, the magenta plane of the input image is extracted and a few preprocessing techniques are carried out. This is followed by the localization and the removal of the optic disk. The threshold value is determined and is optimized using Firefly algorithm. Then top hat transform is applied to detect the microaneurysms. The image quality parameters and the performance parameters were calculated and analyzed on the images of the DIARETDB1 database. The experimental results yielded a sensitivity of 99.80% before optimization and 100% after optimization

    Effect of common pregnancy and perinatal complications on offspring metabolic traits across the life course:a multi-cohort study

    No full text
    Abstract Background: Common pregnancy and perinatal complications are associated with offspring cardiometabolic risk factors. These complications may influence multiple metabolic traits in the offspring and these associations might differ with offspring age. Methods: We used data from eight population-based cohort studies to examine and compare associations of pre-eclampsia (PE), gestational hypertension (GH), gestational diabetes (GD), preterm birth (PTB), small (SGA) and large (LGA) for gestational age (vs. appropriate size for gestational age (AGA)) with up to 167 plasma/serum-based nuclear magnetic resonance-derived metabolic traits encompassing lipids, lipoproteins, fatty acids, amino acids, ketones, glycerides/phospholipids, glycolysis, fluid balance, and inflammation. Confounder-adjusted regression models were used to examine associations (adjusted for maternal education, parity age at pregnancy, ethnicity, pre/early pregnancy body mass index and smoking, and offspring sex and age at metabolic trait assessment), and results were combined using meta-analysis by five age categories representing different periods of the offspring life course: neonates (cord blood), infancy (mean ages: 1.1–1.6 years), childhood (4.2–7.5 years); adolescence (12.0–16.0 years), and adulthood (22.0–67.8 years). Results: Offspring numbers for each age category/analysis varied from 8925 adults (441 PTB) to 1181 infants (135 GD); 48.4% to 60.0% were females. Pregnancy complications (PE, GH, GD) were each associated with up to three metabolic traits in neonates (P≤0.001) with some evidence of persistence to older ages. PTB and SGA were associated with 32 and 12 metabolic traits in neonates respectively, which included an adjusted standardised mean difference of −0.89 standard deviation (SD) units for albumin with PTB (95% CI: −1.10 to −0.69, P=1.3×10⁻¹⁷) and −0.41 SD for total lipids in medium HDL with SGA (95% CI: −0.56 to −0.25, P=2.6×10⁻⁷), with some evidence of persistence to older ages. LGA was inversely associated with 19 metabolic traits including lower levels of cholesterol, lipoproteins, fatty acids, and amino acids, with associations emerging in adolescence, (e.g. −0.11 SD total fatty acids, 95% CI: −0.18 to −0.05, P=0.0009), and attenuating with older age across adulthood. Conclusions: These reassuring findings suggest little evidence of wide-spread and long-term impact of common pregnancy and perinatal complications on offspring metabolic traits, with most associations only observed for newborns rather than older ages, and for perinatal rather than pregnancy complications
    corecore