scholarly journals A Hybrid Proposed Fundus Image Enhancement Framework for Diabetic Retinopathy

Algorithms ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Imran Qureshi ◽  
Jun Ma ◽  
Kashif Shaheed

Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a complication of diabetes and is known as visual impairment, and is diagnosed in various ethnicities of the working-age population worldwide. Fundus angiography is a widely applicable modality used by ophthalmologists and computerized applications to detect DR-based clinical features such as microaneurysms (MAs), hemorrhages (HEMs), and exudates (EXs) for early screening of DR. Fundus images are usually acquired using funduscopic cameras in varied light conditions and angles. Therefore, these images are prone to non-uniform illumination, poor contrast, transmission error, low brightness, and noise problems. This paper presents a novel and real-time mechanism of fundus image enhancement used for early grading of diabetic retinopathy, macular degeneration, retinal neoplasms, and choroid disruptions. The proposed system is based on two folds: (i) An RGB fundus image is initially taken and converted into a color appearance module (called lightness and denoted as J) of the CIECAM02 color space model to obtain image information in grayscale with bright light. Afterwards, in step (ii), the achieved J component is processed using a nonlinear contrast enhancement approach to improve the textural and color features of the fundus image without any further extraction steps. To test and evaluate the strength of the proposed technique, several performance and quality parameters—namely peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), entropy (content information), histograms (intensity variation), and a structure similarity index measure (SSIM)—were applied to 1240 fundus images comprised of two publicly available datasets, DRIVE and MESSIDOR. It was determined from the experiments that the proposed enhancement procedure outperformed histogram-based approaches in terms of contrast, sharpness of fundus features, and brightness. This further revealed that it can be a suitable preprocessing tool for segmentation and classification of DR-related features algorithms.

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charu Bhardwaj ◽  
Shruti Jain ◽  
Meenakshi Sood

: Diabetic Retinopathy is the leading cause of vision impairment and its early stage diagnosis relies on regular monitoring and timely treatment for anomalies exhibiting subtle distinction among different severity grades. The existing Diabetic Retinopathy (DR) detection approaches are subjective, laborious and time consuming which can only be carried out by skilled professionals. All the patents related to DR detection and diagnoses applicable for our research problem were revised by the authors. The major limitation in classification of severities lies in poor discrimination between actual lesions, background noise and other anatomical structures. A robust and computationally efficient Two-Tier DR (2TDR) grading system is proposed in this paper to categorize various DR severities (mild, moderate and severe) present in retinal fundus images. In the proposed 2TDR grading system, input fundus image is subjected to background segmentation and the foreground fundus image is used for anomaly identification followed by GLCM feature extraction forming an image feature set. The novelty of our model lies in the exhaustive statistical analysis of extracted feature set to obtain optimal reduced image feature set employed further for classification. Classification outcomes are obtained for both extracted as well as reduced feature set to validate the significance of statistical analysis in severity classification and grading. For single tier classification stage, the proposed system achieves an overall accuracy of 100% by k- Nearest Neighbour (kNN) and Artificial Neural Network (ANN) classifier. In second tier classification stage an overall accuracy of 95.3% with kNN and 98.0% with ANN is achieved for all stages utilizing optimal reduced feature set. 2TDR system demonstrates overall improvement in classification performance by 2% and 6% for kNN and ANN respectively after feature set reduction, and also outperforms the accuracy obtained by other state of the art methods when applied to the MESSIDOR dataset. This application oriented work aids in accurate DR classification for effective diagnosis and timely treatment of severe retinal ailment.


Author(s):  
Alfiya Md. Shaikh

Abstract: Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a medical condition that damages eye retinal tissues. Diabetic retinopathy leads to mild to complete blindness. It has been a leading cause of global blindness. The identification and categorization of DR take place through the segmentation of parts of the fundus image or the examination of the fundus image for the incidence of exudates, lesions, microaneurysms, and so on. This research aims to study and summarize various recent proposed techniques applied to automate the process of classification of diabetic retinopathy. In the current study, the researchers focused on the concept of classifying the DR fundus images based on their severity level. Emphasis is on studying papers that proposed models developed using transfer learning. Thus, it becomes vital to develop an automatic diagnosis system to support physicians in their work.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandro Noriega ◽  
Dalia Camacho ◽  
Daniela Meizner ◽  
Jennifer Enciso ◽  
Hugo Quiroz-Mercado ◽  
...  

Background: The automated screening of patients at risk of developing diabetic retinopathy (DR), represents an opportunity to improve their mid-term outcome and lower the public expenditure associated with direct and indirect costs of a common sight-threatening complication of diabetes. Objective: In the present study, we aim at developing and evaluating the performance of an automated deep learning-based system to classify retinal fundus images from international and Mexican patients, as referable and non-referable DR cases. In particular, we study the performance of the automated retina image analysis (ARIA) system under an independent scheme (i.e. only ARIA screening) and two assistive schemes (i.e., hybrid ARIA + ophthalmologist screening), using a web-based platform for remote image analysis. Methods: We ran a randomized controlled experiment where 17 ophthalmologists were asked to classify a series of retinal fundus images under three different conditions: 1) screening the fundus image by themselves (solo), 2) screening the fundus image after being exposed to the opinion of the ARIA system (ARIA answer), and 3) screening the fundus image after being exposed to the opinion of the ARIA system, as well as its level of confidence and an attention map highlighting the most important areas of interest in the image according to the ARIA system (ARIA explanation). The ophthalmologists' opinion in each condition and the opinion of the ARIA system were compared against a gold standard generated by consulting and aggregating the opinion of three retina specialists for each fundus image. Results: The ARIA system was able to classify referable vs. non-referable cases with an area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve (AUROC), sensitivity, and specificity of 98%, 95.1% and 91.5% respectively, for international patient-cases; and an AUROC, sensitivity, and specificity of 98.3%, 95.2%, 90% respectively for Mexican patient-cases. The results achieved on Mexican patient-cases outperformed the average performance of the 17 ophthalmologist participants of the study. We also find that the ARIA system can be useful as an assistive tool, as significant specificity improvements were observed in the experimental condition where participants were exposed to the answer of the ARIA system as a second opinion (93.3%), compared to the specificity of the condition where participants assessed the images independently (87.3%). Conclusions: These results demonstrate that both use cases of ARIA systems, independent and assistive, present a substantial opportunity for Latin American countries like Mexico towards an efficient expansion of monitoring capacity for the early detection of diabetes-related blindness.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Huma Kayani

The term artificial intelligence (AI) was proposed in 1956 by Dartmouth scholar John McCarthy, which refers to hardware or software that exhibits behavior which appears intelligent.1  During recent times, AI gained immense popularity as new algorithms, specialized hardware, huge data and cloud-based services were developed. Machine learning (ML), a subset of AI, originated in 1980 and is defined as a set of methods that automatically detect patterns in data and then incorporate this information to predict future data under uncertain conditions. Another escalating technology of ML called Deep learning (DL), launched in 2000s, is an escalating technology of ML and has revolutionized the world of AI. These technologies are powerful tools utilized by modern society for objects' recognition in images, real-time languages' translation, device manipulation via speech (such as Apple's Siri®, Amazon’s Alexa®, Microsoft’s Cortana®, etc.). The steps for AI model include preprocessing image data, train, validate and test the model, and evaluate the trained model's performance. To increase AI prediction efficiency, raw data need to be preprocessed. Data collected from different sources needs to be integrated and the most relevant features selected and extracted to improve the learning process performance. Data set is randomly partitioned into two independent subsets, one is for modeling and the other is for testing. The test set is used to evaluate the final performance of the trained model. The area under receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC) is most used evaluation metrics for quantitative assessment of a model in AI diagnosis. The AUCs effective models range from 0.5 to 1; higher the value of AUC, better the performance of the model.2 In the medical field, AI gained popularity by visualization of input images of highly potential abnormal sites which can be reviewed and analyzed in future.           AI and DL algorithms or systems are also widely used in field of ophthalmology. More intensively studied fields are diabetic retinopathy, age related macular degeneration, and cataract and glaucoma. Various ophthalmic imaging modalities used for AI diagnosis include fundus image, optical coherence tomography (OCT), ocular ultrasound, slit-lamp image and visual field. Diabetic retinopathy (DR), a diabetic complication, is a vasculopathy that affects one-third of diabetic patients leading to irreversible blindness. AI has been in use to predict DR risk and its progression. Gulshan and colleague were the first to report the application of DL for DR identification.3 They used large fundus image data sets in supervised manner for DR detection. Other studies applied DL to identify and stage DR. DL-based computer-aided system was introduced to detect DR through OCT images, achieving a specificity of 0.98.4 A computer-aided diagnostic (CAD) system based on CML algorithms using optical coherence tomography angiography images to automatically diagnose non-proliferative DR (NPDR) also achieved high accuracy and AUC.5 Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of irreversible blindness among old people in the developed world. ML algorithms are being used to identify AMD lesions and prompt early treatment with accuracy usually over 80%.6 Using ML to predict treatment of retinal neovascularity in AMD and DR by anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (Anti VEGF) injection requirements can manage patients' economic burden and resource management. ML algorithms have been applied to diagnose and grade cataract using fundus images, ultrasounds images, and visible wavelength eye images.7 Glaucoma is the third largest sight-threatening eye disease around the world. Glaucoma patients suffered from high intraocular pressure, damage of the optic nerve head, retina nerve fiber layer defect, and gradual vision loss. Studies using DL methods to diagnose glaucoma are few. So far, fundus images and wide-field OCT scans have all been used to construct DL-based glaucomatous diagnostic models. Mostly, the DL-based methods show excellent results.8           In this era of “evidence-based medicine,” clinicians and patients find it difficult to trust a mysterious machine to diagnose yet cannot provide explanations of why the patient has certain disease. In future, advanced AI interpreters will be launched which will contribute significantly to revolutionize current disease diagnostic pattern.


2013 ◽  
Vol 397-400 ◽  
pp. 2205-2208
Author(s):  
Wen Dong Zhao ◽  
You Dong Zhang ◽  
Chun Xia Jin

Fundus images are complex images with more details, and on the basis of the inadequate fuzzy enhancement algorithm proposed by Pal et al, this article propose an improved algorithm of rough set for fundus image enhancement. The fundus image will be multi-scale decomposed by wavelet transform firstly, and then the subgraphs are enhanced by using rough set to improve the visual effects; finally the processed sub-images will be reconstructed and generated a new-enhanced image. Compared with the Pal algorithm, the new algorithm not only overcomes its weaknesses that the threshold is set with a fixed value, but also reduces the number of iterations. Experimental results show that the improved enhancement algorithm has a better effect on the fundus image enhancement, and the various details of fundus images can be shown better.


Diabetic Retinopathy is the disease caused for diabetic people which doesn’t have symptoms in the first phase. As it progresses, it becomes symptomatic. This disease, sometimes, might lead to complete blindness. Red lesions contain microaneurysms, haemorrhages and exudates. This work focuses on detection of red lesions in fundus image. Ophthalmologists use pupil dilation of chemical solutions in order to detect the abnormality which takes time and also causes irritation to patients. Image processing techniques are used to avoid these limitations. Morphological operations are used to identify the pixels belonging to the red lesions. Gabor filter is used for separating the blood vessels. Some spots are formed near macular region because blood vessels become leaky which leads to exudates. The severity level of the disease is determined by finding the distance between lesions and macular region. The disease is considered as severe if the distance between them is closer and confirms as less if the distance is far.


Author(s):  
Juan Elisha Widyaya ◽  
Setia Budi

Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is eye diseases caused by diabetic mellitus or sugar diseases. If DR is detected in early stage, the blindness that follow can be prevented. Ophthalmologist or eye clinician usually decide the stage of DR from retinal fundus images. Careful examination of retinal fundus images is time consuming task and require experienced clinicians or ophthalmologist but a computer which has been trained to recognize the DR stages can diagnose and give result in real-time manner. One approach of algorithm to train a computer to recognize an image is deep learning Convolutional Neural Network (CNN). CNN allows a computer to learn the features of an image, in our case is retinal fundus image, automatically. Preprocessing is usually done before a CNN model is trained. In this study, four preprocessing were carried out. Of the four preprocessing tested, preprocessing with CLAHE and unsharp masking on the green channel of the retinal fundus image give the best results with an accuracy of 79.79%, 82.97% precision, 74.64% recall, and 95.81% AUC. The CNN architecture used is Inception v3.


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