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1.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 11: 1424585, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39027006

ABSTRACT

Electrocardiogram (ECG) is a non-invasive approach to capture the overall electrical activity produced by the contraction and relaxation of the cardiac muscles. It has been established in the literature that the difference between ECG-derived age and chronological age represents a general measure of cardiovascular health. Elevated ECG-derived age strongly correlates with cardiovascular conditions (e.g., atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease). However, the neural networks for ECG age estimation are yet to be thoroughly evaluated from the perspective of ECG acquisition parameters. Additionally, deep learning systems for ECG analysis encounter challenges in generalizing across diverse ECG morphologies in various ethnic groups and are susceptible to errors with signals that exhibit random or systematic distortions To address these challenges, we perform a comprehensive empirical study to determine the threshold for the sampling rate and duration of ECG signals while considering their impact on the computational cost of the neural networks. To tackle the concern of ECG waveform variability in different populations, we evaluate the feasibility of utilizing pre-trained and fine-tuned networks to estimate ECG age in different ethnic groups. Additionally, we empirically demonstrate that finetuning is an environmentally sustainable way to train neural networks, and it significantly decreases the ECG instances required (by more than 100 × ) for attaining performance similar to the networks trained from random weight initialization on a complete dataset. Finally, we systematically evaluate augmentation schemes for ECG signals in the context of age estimation and introduce a random cropping scheme that provides best-in-class performance while using shorter-duration ECG signals. The results also show that random cropping enables the networks to perform well with systematic and random ECG signal corruptions.

2.
Artif Intell Med ; 146: 102690, 2023 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38042607

ABSTRACT

Twelve lead electrocardiogram signals capture unique fingerprints about the body's biological processes and electrical activity of heart muscles. Machine learning and deep learning-based models can learn the embedded patterns in the electrocardiogram to estimate complex metrics such as age and gender that depend on multiple aspects of human physiology. ECG estimated age with respect to the chronological age reflects the overall well-being of the cardiovascular system, with significant positive deviations indicating an aged cardiovascular system and a higher likelihood of cardiovascular mortality. Several conventional, machine learning, and deep learning-based methods have been proposed to estimate age from electronic health records, health surveys, and ECG data. This manuscript comprehensively reviews the methodologies proposed for ECG-based age and gender estimation over the last decade. Specifically, the review highlights that elevated ECG age is associated with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, abnormal peripheral endothelial dysfunction, and high mortality, among many other cardiovascular disorders. Furthermore, the survey presents overarching observations and insights across methods for age and gender estimation. This paper also presents several essential methodological improvements and clinical applications of ECG-estimated age and gender to encourage further improvements of the state-of-the-art methodologies.


Subject(s)
Electrocardiography , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Aged , Electrocardiography/methods , Machine Learning , Heart Rate/physiology , Probability
3.
Front Oncol ; 13: 1282536, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38125949

ABSTRACT

Elastography Ultrasound provides elasticity information of the tissues, which is crucial for understanding the density and texture, allowing for the diagnosis of different medical conditions such as fibrosis and cancer. In the current medical imaging scenario, elastograms for B-mode Ultrasound are restricted to well-equipped hospitals, making the modality unavailable for pocket ultrasound. To highlight the recent progress in elastogram synthesis, this article performs a critical review of generative adversarial network (GAN) methodology for elastogram generation from B-mode Ultrasound images. Along with a brief overview of cutting-edge medical image synthesis, the article highlights the contribution of the GAN framework in light of its impact and thoroughly analyzes the results to validate whether the existing challenges have been effectively addressed. Specifically, This article highlights that GANs can successfully generate accurate elastograms for deep-seated breast tumors (without having artifacts) and improve diagnostic effectiveness for pocket US. Furthermore, the results of the GAN framework are thoroughly analyzed by considering the quantitative metrics, visual evaluations, and cancer diagnostic accuracy. Finally, essential unaddressed challenges that lie at the intersection of elastography and GANs are presented, and a few future directions are shared for the elastogram synthesis research.

4.
Cancer Med ; 12(13): 14225-14251, 2023 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37191030

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Percutaneous thermal ablation has become the preferred therapeutic treatment option for liver cancers that cannot be resected. Since ablative zone tissue changes over time, it becomes challenging to determine therapy effectiveness over an extended period. Thus, an immediate post-procedural evaluation of the ablation zone is crucial, as it could influence the need for a second-look treatment or follow-up plan. Assessing treatment response immediately after ablation is essential to attain favorable outcomes. This study examines the efficacy of image fusion strategies immediately post-ablation in liver neoplasms to determine therapeutic response. METHODOLOGY: A comprehensive systematic search using PRISMA methodology was conducted using EMBASE, MEDLINE (via PUBMED), and Cochrane Library Central Registry electronic databases to identify articles that assessed the immediate post-ablation response in malignant hepatic tumors with fusion imaging (FI) systems. The data were retrieved on relevant clinical characteristics, including population demographics, pre-intervention clinical history, lesion characteristics, and intervention type. For the outcome metrics, variables such as average fusion time, intervention metrics, technical success rate, ablative safety margin, supplementary ablation rate, technical efficacy rate, LTP rates, and reported complications were extracted. RESULTS: Twenty-two studies were included for review after fulfilling the study eligibility criteria. FI's immediate technical success rate ranged from 81.3% to 100% in 17/22 studies. In 16/22 studies, the ablative safety margin was assessed immediately after ablation. Supplementary ablation was performed in 9 studies following immediate evaluation by FI. In 15/22 studies, the technical effectiveness rates during the first follow-up varied from 89.3% to 100%. CONCLUSION: Based on the studies included, we found that FI can accurately determine the immediate therapeutic response in liver cancer ablation image fusion and could be a feasible intraprocedural tool for determining short-term post-ablation outcomes in unresectable liver neoplasms. There are some technical challenges that limit the widespread adoption of FI techniques. Large-scale randomized trials are warranted to improve on existing protocols. Future research should emphasize improving FI's technological capabilities and clinical applicability to a broader range of tumor types and ablation procedures.


Subject(s)
Ablation Techniques , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular , Catheter Ablation , Liver Neoplasms , Humans , Liver Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Liver Neoplasms/surgery , Liver Neoplasms/pathology , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/surgery , Ablation Techniques/adverse effects , Ablation Techniques/methods , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Catheter Ablation/adverse effects , Catheter Ablation/methods
5.
Comput Biol Med ; 153: 106478, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36603437

ABSTRACT

Liver Ultrasound (US) or sonography is popularly used because of its real-time output, low-cost, ease-of-use, portability, and non-invasive nature. Segmentation of real-time liver US is essential for diagnosing and analyzing liver conditions (e.g., hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)), assisting the surgeons/radiologists in therapeutic procedures. In this paper, we propose a method using a modified Pyramid Scene Parsing (PSP) module in tuned neural network backbones to achieve real-time segmentation without compromising the segmentation accuracy. Considering widespread noise in US data and its impact on outcomes, we study the impact of pre-processing and the influence of loss functions on segmentation performance. We have tested our method after annotating a publicly available US dataset containing 2400 images of 8 healthy volunteers (link to the annotated dataset is provided); the results show that the Dense-PSP-UNet model achieves a high Dice coefficient of 0.913±0.024 while delivering a real-time performance of 37 frames per second (FPS).


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular , Liver Neoplasms , Humans , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/diagnostic imaging , Liver Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Ultrasonography , Neural Networks, Computer , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
7.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 14153, 2022 08 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35986015

ABSTRACT

Segmentation of abdominal Computed Tomography (CT) scan is essential for analyzing, diagnosing, and treating visceral organ diseases (e.g., hepatocellular carcinoma). This paper proposes a novel neural network (Res-PAC-UNet) that employs a fixed-width residual UNet backbone and Pyramid Atrous Convolutions, providing a low disk utilization method for precise liver CT segmentation. The proposed network is trained on medical segmentation decathlon dataset using a modified surface loss function. Additionally, we evaluate its quantitative and qualitative performance; the Res16-PAC-UNet achieves a Dice coefficient of 0.950 ± 0.019 with less than half a million parameters. Alternatively, the Res32-PAC-UNet obtains a Dice coefficient of 0.958 ± 0.015 with an acceptable parameter count of approximately 1.2 million.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Liver Neoplasms , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Liver Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Liver Neoplasms/pathology , Neural Networks, Computer , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods
9.
BMC Med Imaging ; 22(1): 97, 2022 05 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35610600

ABSTRACT

Clinical imaging (e.g., magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography) is a crucial adjunct for clinicians, aiding in the diagnosis of diseases and planning of appropriate interventions. This is especially true in malignant conditions such as hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), where image segmentation (such as accurate delineation of liver and tumor) is the preliminary step taken by the clinicians to optimize diagnosis, staging, and treatment planning and intervention (e.g., transplantation, surgical resection, radiotherapy, PVE, embolization, etc). Thus, segmentation methods could potentially impact the diagnosis and treatment outcomes. This paper comprehensively reviews the literature (during the year 2012-2021) for relevant segmentation methods and proposes a broad categorization based on their clinical utility (i.e., surgical and radiological interventions) in HCC. The categorization is based on the parameters such as precision, accuracy, and automation.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular , Liver Neoplasms , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/diagnostic imaging , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/surgery , Humans , Liver Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Liver Neoplasms/surgery , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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