Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 2 de 2
Filtrar
Mais filtros










Base de dados
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 23(6)2023 Mar 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36991588

RESUMO

Image registration for temporal ultrasound sequences can be very beneficial for image-guided diagnostics and interventions. Cooperative human-machine systems that enable seamless assistance for both inexperienced and expert users during ultrasound examinations rely on robust, realtime motion estimation. Yet rapid and irregular motion patterns, varying image contrast and domain shifts in imaging devices pose a severe challenge to conventional realtime registration approaches. While learning-based registration networks have the promise of abstracting relevant features and delivering very fast inference times, they come at the potential risk of limited generalisation and robustness for unseen data; in particular, when trained with limited supervision. In this work, we demonstrate that these issues can be overcome by using end-to-end differentiable displacement optimisation. Our method involves a trainable feature backbone, a correlation layer that evaluates a large range of displacement options simultaneously and a differentiable regularisation module that ensures smooth and plausible deformation. In extensive experiments on public and private ultrasound datasets with very sparse ground truth annotation the method showed better generalisation abilities and overall accuracy than a VoxelMorph network with the same feature backbone, while being two times faster at inference.

2.
NPJ Digit Med ; 4(1): 137, 2021 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34526639

RESUMO

Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is a blood clot most commonly found in the leg, which can lead to fatal pulmonary embolism (PE). Compression ultrasound of the legs is the diagnostic gold standard, leading to a definitive diagnosis. However, many patients with possible symptoms are not found to have a DVT, resulting in long referral waiting times for patients and a large clinical burden for specialists. Thus, diagnosis at the point of care by non-specialists is desired. We collect images in a pre-clinical study and investigate a deep learning approach for the automatic interpretation of compression ultrasound images. Our method provides guidance for free-hand ultrasound and aids non-specialists in detecting DVT. We train a deep learning algorithm on ultrasound videos from 255 volunteers and evaluate on a sample size of 53 prospectively enrolled patients from an NHS DVT diagnostic clinic and 30 prospectively enrolled patients from a German DVT clinic. Algorithmic DVT diagnosis performance results in a sensitivity within a 95% CI range of (0.82, 0.94), specificity of (0.70, 0.82), a positive predictive value of (0.65, 0.89), and a negative predictive value of (0.99, 1.00) when compared to the clinical gold standard. To assess the potential benefits of this technology in healthcare we evaluate the entire clinical DVT decision algorithm and provide cost analysis when integrating our approach into diagnostic pathways for DVT. Our approach is estimated to generate a positive net monetary benefit at costs up to £72 to £175 per software-supported examination, assuming a willingness to pay of £20,000/QALY.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA
...