Automatic recognition of midline shift on brain CT images

2010 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 331-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chun-Chih Liao ◽  
Furen Xiao ◽  
Jau-Min Wong ◽  
I-Jen Chiang
2011 ◽  
Vol 403-408 ◽  
pp. 5121-5125
Author(s):  
Ke Chun Huang ◽  
Fu Ren Xiao ◽  
Jau Min Wong ◽  
I Jen Chiang ◽  
Chun Chih Liao

Effacement of the basal cisterns (BC) and midline shift (MLS) are two most important features clinicians use to evaluate the severity of brain compression by various pathologies. Because of its complex shape, measuring the compression of the BC is not an easy task and its standardization has not been proposed until recently. Based on this standard method, we develop a method for automatic recognition of the BC on brain CT slices. Hypodense pixels of the brain area on each slice are found with a threshold derived from its own histogram. Hough transform is then applied to find the semicircular band containing largest number of hypodense pixels within the lower-central brain. This area was recognized as the normal or abnormal BC if it fits certain rules derived from human experts. Our system is tested on patient images. We found good inter-rater agreement between the results generated by our system and those evaluated by a board-certified neurosurgeon (kappa = 0.957).


Author(s):  
Wenan Chen ◽  
Ashwin Belle ◽  
Charles Cockrell ◽  
Kevin R. Ward ◽  
Kayvan Najarian

Author(s):  
Tomasz Les ◽  
Tomasz Markiewicz ◽  
Miroslaw Dziekiewicz ◽  
Malgorzata Lorent

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (S6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianqiang Li ◽  
Guanghui Fu ◽  
Yueda Chen ◽  
Pengzhi Li ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Screening of the brain computerised tomography (CT) images is a primary method currently used for initial detection of patients with brain trauma or other conditions. In recent years, deep learning technique has shown remarkable advantages in the clinical practice. Researchers have attempted to use deep learning methods to detect brain diseases from CT images. Methods often used to detect diseases choose images with visible lesions from full-slice brain CT scans, which need to be labelled by doctors. This is an inaccurate method because doctors detect brain disease from a full sequence scan of CT images and one patient may have multiple concurrent conditions in practice. The method cannot take into account the dependencies between the slices and the causal relationships among various brain diseases. Moreover, labelling images slice by slice spends much time and expense. Detecting multiple diseases from full slice brain CT images is, therefore, an important research subject with practical implications. Results In this paper, we propose a model called the slice dependencies learning model (SDLM). It learns image features from a series of variable length brain CT images and slice dependencies between different slices in a set of images to predict abnormalities. The model is necessary to only label the disease reflected in the full-slice brain scan. We use the CQ500 dataset to evaluate our proposed model, which contains 1194 full sets of CT scans from a total of 491 subjects. Each set of data from one subject contains scans with one to eight different slice thicknesses and various diseases that are captured in a range of 30 to 396 slices in a set. The evaluation results present that the precision is 67.57%, the recall is 61.04%, the F1 score is 0.6412, and the areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUCs) is 0.8934. Conclusion The proposed model is a new architecture that uses a full-slice brain CT scan for multi-label classification, unlike the traditional methods which only classify the brain images at the slice level. It has great potential for application to multi-label detection problems, especially with regard to the brain CT images.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (06) ◽  
pp. 1850037
Author(s):  
Ling-ling Cui ◽  
Hui Zhang

In order to effectively improve the pathological diagnosis capability and feature resolution of 3D human brain CT images, a threshold segmentation method of multi-resolution 3D human brain CT image based on edge pixel grayscale feature decomposition is proposed in this paper. In this method, first, original 3D human brain image information is collected, and CT image filtering is performed to the collected information through the gradient value decomposition method, and edge contour features of the 3D human brain CT image are extracted. Then, the threshold segmentation method is adopted to segment the regional pixel feature block of the 3D human brain CT image to segment the image into block vectors with high-resolution feature points, and the 3D human brain CT image is reconstructed with the salient feature point as center. Simulation results show that the method proposed in this paper can provide accuracy up to 100% when the signal-to-noise ratio is 0, and with the increase of signal-to-noise ratio, the accuracy provided by this method is stable at 100%. Comparison results show that the threshold segmentation method of multi-resolution 3D human brain CT image based on edge pixel grayscale feature decomposition is significantly better than traditional methods in pathological feature estimation accuracy, and it effectively improves the rapid pathological diagnosis and positioning recognition abilities to CT images.


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