Application of conditional GAN models in optic disc/optic cup segmentation of retinal fundus images

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tales H. Carvalho ◽  
Carlos H. Moraes ◽  
Rafael C. Almeida ◽  
Danilo H. Spadoti

Glaucoma is one of the major causes of vision loss in today’s world. Glaucoma is a disease in the eye where fluid pressure in the eye increases; if it is not timely cured, the patient may lose their vision. Glaucoma can be detected by examining boundary of optics cup and optics disc acquired from fundus images. The proposed method suggest automatic detect the boundary of optics cup and optics disc with processing of fundus images. This paper explores the new approach fast fuzzy C-mean technique for segmenting the optic disc and optic cup in fundus images. Results evaluated by fast fuzzy C mean a technique is faster than fuzzy C-mean method. The proposed method reported results to 91.91%, 90.49% and 90.17% when tested on DRIONS, DRIVE and STARE on publicly available databases of fundus images.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 3777 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun Jiang ◽  
Falin Wang ◽  
Jing Gao ◽  
Simin Cao

Diabetes can induce diseases including diabetic retinopathy, cataracts, glaucoma, etc. The blindness caused by these diseases is irreversible. Early analysis of retinal fundus images, including optic disc and optic cup detection and retinal blood vessel segmentation, can effectively identify these diseases. The existing methods lack sufficient discrimination power for the fundus image and are easily affected by pathological regions. This paper proposes a novel multi-path recurrent U-Net architecture to achieve the segmentation of retinal fundus images. The effectiveness of the proposed network structure was proved by two segmentation tasks: optic disc and optic cup segmentation and retinal vessel segmentation. Our method achieved state-of-the-art results in the segmentation of the Drishti-GS1 dataset. Regarding optic disc segmentation, the accuracy and Dice values reached 0.9967 and 0.9817, respectively; as regards optic cup segmentation, the accuracy and Dice values reached 0.9950 and 0.8921, respectively. Our proposed method was also verified on the retinal blood vessel segmentation dataset DRIVE and achieved a good accuracy rate.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 3833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haidar Almubarak ◽  
Yakoub Bazi ◽  
Naif Alajlan

In this paper, we propose a method for localizing the optic nerve head and segmenting the optic disc/cup in retinal fundus images. The approach is based on a simple two-stage Mask-RCNN compared to sophisticated methods that represent the state-of-the-art in the literature. In the first stage, we detect and crop around the optic nerve head then feed the cropped image as input for the second stage. The second stage network is trained using a weighted loss to produce the final segmentation. To further improve the detection in the first stage, we propose a new fine-tuning strategy by combining the cropping output of the first stage with the original training image to train a new detection network using different scales for the region proposal network anchors. We evaluate the method on Retinal Fundus Images for Glaucoma Analysis (REFUGE), Magrabi, and MESSIDOR datasets. We used the REFUGE training subset to train the models in the proposed method. Our method achieved 0.0430 mean absolute error in the vertical cup-to-disc ratio (MAE vCDR) on the REFUGE test set compared to 0.0414 obtained using complex and multiple ensemble networks methods. The models trained with the proposed method transfer well to datasets outside REFUGE, achieving a MAE vCDR of 0.0785 and 0.077 on MESSIDOR and Magrabi datasets, respectively, without being retrained. In terms of detection accuracy, the proposed new fine-tuning strategy improved the detection rate from 96.7% to 98.04% on MESSIDOR and from 93.6% to 100% on Magrabi datasets compared to the reported detection rates in the literature.


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