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MyI-Net: Fully Automatic Detection and Quantification of Myocardial Infarction from Cardiovascular MRI Images.
Wang, Shuihua; Abdelaty, Ahmed M S E K; Parke, Kelly; Arnold, Jayanth Ranjit; McCann, Gerry P; Tyukin, Ivan Y.
Afiliación
  • Wang S; Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of LeicesterGlenfield Hospital, Leicester LE3 9QP, UK.
  • Abdelaty AMSEK; The NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre, Glenfield Hospital, Leicester LE3 9QP, UK.
  • Parke K; School of Computing and Mathematical Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK.
  • Arnold JR; Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of LeicesterGlenfield Hospital, Leicester LE3 9QP, UK.
  • McCann GP; The NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre, Glenfield Hospital, Leicester LE3 9QP, UK.
  • Tyukin IY; Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of LeicesterGlenfield Hospital, Leicester LE3 9QP, UK.
Entropy (Basel) ; 25(3)2023 Feb 28.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36981320
Myocardial infarction (MI) occurs when an artery supplying blood to the heart is abruptly occluded. The "gold standard" method for imaging MI is cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with intravenously administered gadolinium-based contrast (with damaged areas apparent as late gadolinium enhancement [LGE]). However, no "gold standard" fully automated method for the quantification of MI exists. In this work, we propose an end-to-end fully automatic system (MyI-Net) for the detection and quantification of MI in MRI images. It has the potential to reduce uncertainty due to technical variability across labs and the inherent problems of data and labels. Our system consists of four processing stages designed to maintain the flow of information across scales. First, features from raw MRI images are generated using feature extractors built on ResNet and MoblieNet architectures. This is followed by atrous spatial pyramid pooling (ASPP) to produce spatial information at different scales to preserve more image context. High-level features from ASPP and initial low-level features are concatenated at the third stage and then passed to the fourth stage where spatial information is recovered via up-sampling to produce final image segmentation output into: (i) background, (ii) heart muscle, (iii) blood and (iv) LGE areas. Our experiments show that the model named MI-ResNet50-AC provides the best global accuracy (97.38%), mean accuracy (86.01%), weighted intersection over union (IoU) of 96.47%, and bfscore of 64.46% for the global segmentation. However, in detecting only LGE tissue, a smaller model, MI-ResNet18-AC, exhibited higher accuracy (74.41%) than MI-ResNet50-AC (64.29%). New models were compared with state-of-the-art models and manual quantification. Our models demonstrated favorable performance in global segmentation and LGE detection relative to the state-of-the-art, including a four-fold better performance in matching LGE pixels to contours produced by clinicians.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Diagnostic_studies / Guideline Idioma: En Revista: Entropy (Basel) Año: 2023 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Diagnostic_studies / Guideline Idioma: En Revista: Entropy (Basel) Año: 2023 Tipo del documento: Article