scholarly journals Evaluation of Scopio Labs X100 Full Field PBS: The first high‐resolution full field viewing of peripheral blood specimens combined with artificial intelligence‐based morphological analysis

Author(s):  
Ben‐Zion Katz ◽  
Michael D. Feldman ◽  
Minychel Tessema ◽  
Dan Benisty ◽  
Grace Stewart Toles ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 8-9
Author(s):  
Ben Zion Katz ◽  
Irit Avivi ◽  
Dan Benisty ◽  
Shahar Karni ◽  
Hadar Shimoni ◽  
...  

Complete blood count (CBC) analysis is one of the most commonly ordered laboratory tests and is a critical first step in patients' clinical evaluation. However, CBC analyzers are limited in their ability to positively identify several types of white blood cells (WBC), and cells with substantial clinical significance, such as immature granulocytes or blasts, are merely marked as flags. Also, CBC analyzers fall short of recognizing informative red blood cell (RBC) morphology, such as schistocytes, and often provide inaccurate platelets count. Flags and clinically non-sufficient CBC-derived data reflex to generation of blood smear (BS), and BS review comprises a substantial portion of the workload in routine hematology laboratories. For accurate identification and classification of WBC, BS analysis (BSA) requires detailed observation of cells with high-magnification objective (60-100X), which provides a relatively narrow Field of View (FOV). This physical limitation restricts current BSA to either low resolution/wide FOV or to high resolution/narrow FOV data generation (Fig. 1A). Hence, key issues of BSA such as the effects of the smearing process on the distribution of blood components, the effects of cells distribution on their morphology and further classification, as well as many other attributes, are addressed only qualitatively or empirically, leaving the real topology of the BS obscure. The computational imaging microscopy system presented herein uses a low resolution and wide FOV objective, and records a plurality of images under different illumination conditions, of the same sample area (Fig. 1B). An algorithm reconstructs a high resolution and aberration free image of whole specimens, as can be observed in the attached link (https://tinyurl.com/Scopio-Labs-X100-ASH-2020). High resolution images are critical not only for manual BSA, but also for artificial intelligence (AI)-derived BSA, since data quality is of prime importance for deep-learning processes, and to a large extent determine their outcome. Thus, the combination of high resolution/wide FOV turns each BS into a big data analytic field, rendering the measurement of yet undetermined cell characteristics. In order to elucidate the basic topology, 60 normal BS (28 females, 32 males) were subjected to analysis utilizing this novel computational imaging microscopy. For convenience of analysis and comparison with current BSA methodology, BS were segmented into strips according to RBC density (Fig. 1C, D). The average length of smear from females (F) was higher by nearly 28% compared with smear from males (M), and the presence of acute inflammation (A) resulted in a significant 33% increase in overall smear length compared to normal (N) average (Fig. 1E). As expected, RBC density formed a linear gradient (Fig. 1C) along the axis of sample smearing, however, RBC morphology was affected by location within the BS. For example, strips 4-5 contained RBC with the appearance of spherocytes (Fig. 1F; arrows), while in strips with increased RBC density, cells aggregated resembling rouleaux formation (Fig. 1F; arrowheads). Platelets distribution was non-linear, with only a few of them reaching the feathered edge of the smear (Fig. 1G). Since the variance of both RBC/FOV and platelets/FOV concentrations drops starting with strip 4, BS-derived platelets number estimates should not be performed in strips 1-3. On average, a normal BS contains 890+399 WBC in the scanned area (strips 1-8). Similar to RBC, the location of individual WBC throughout the BS may affect their morphology, and hence their classification. WBC in the feathered edge (strips 1-3) are generally more stretched, and often squeezed between RBC, rendering their classification by AI-based tools challenging (Fig. 1H). In strips 4-7, WBC morphology is optimal for a classification task, enabling favorable outcomes for either manual or AI cell analysis (Fig. 1H). These data indicate that BSA can be taken to a sensitivity level of at least 10-3 of WBC analysis, provided that a large portion of the BS is scanned. Our system provides a novel combination of computational imaging microscopy and AI-based classification tools to unravel the complex topology of blood smears, and upgrade the data obtained in BSA. This approach enables the establishment of quantitative rules to scientifically direct the objective analysis of cellular blood components both manually, and by AI-tools. Figure Disclosures Katz: Scopio Labs: Consultancy.


Author(s):  
Yao Cai ◽  
Jules Scholler ◽  
Kassandra Groux ◽  
Olivier Thouvenin ◽  
Claude Boccara ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Soobia Saeed ◽  
N. Z. Jhanjhi ◽  
Memood Naqvi ◽  
Mamoona Humayun ◽  
Vasaki Ponnusamy

A new coronavirus-CoV-2 virus has caused disease outbreaks in many countries, and the number of cases is increasing rapidly through transmission from person to person. Clinical acoustics for SARS-CoV-2 patients are crucial to distinguish them from other respiratory infections. Symptomatic sufferers can also have pulmonary lesions on the photographs. A computerized tomography study in patients with suspected COVID-19 pneumonia consists of using a high-resolution approach (HRCT). Artificial intelligence applications need to be useful in categorizing the illness to an awesome severity and integrating the structured file, organized consistent with subjective issues, with objective and quantitative checks of the amount of the lesions. Data indicate the statistical document of the world in trendy. This method, with the aid of a coloring map, identifies floor glass in submission processing and separates it from consolidation and units it as a percentage in respect to the balanced weight loss program.


Metals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 592
Author(s):  
S. Ramachandran ◽  
A. Lakshminarayanan ◽  
P. Reed ◽  
J. Dulieu-Barton

Friction stir welded (FSW) 304 austenitic stainless steel (SS) joints are studied using a range of microstructural characterization techniques to identify various sub-regions across the weld. A high-resolution (HR) 2D-digital image correlation (DIC) methodology is developed to assess the local strain response across the weld surface and cross-section in the elastic regime. The HR-DIC methodology includes the stitching of multiple images, as it is only possible to partially cover the FSW region using a single camera with the high-resolution optical set-up. An image processing procedure is described to stitch the strain maps as well as strain data sets that allow full-field strain to be visualized and interrogated over the entire FSW region. It is demonstrated that the strains derived from the DIC can be associated with the local weld geometry and the material microstructure in the region of the FSW. The procedure is validated in the material elastic range and provides an important first step in enabling detailed mechanical assessments of the local effects in the FSW process.


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