Literature DB >> 32314226

Cardiac point-of-care to cart-based ultrasound translation using constrained CycleGAN.

Mohammad H Jafari1, Hany Girgis2,3, Nathan Van Woudenberg2, Nathaniel Moulson2,3, Christina Luong2,3, Andrea Fung2,3, Shane Balthazaar2,3, John Jue2,3, Micheal Tsang2,3, Parvathy Nair2,3, Ken Gin2,3, Robert Rohling2, Purang Abolmaesumi2, Teresa Tsang2,3.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The emerging market of cardiac handheld ultrasound (US) is on the rise. Despite the advantages in ease of access and the lower cost, a gap in image quality can still be observed between the echocardiography (echo) data captured by point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) compared to conventional cart-based US, which limits the further adaptation of POCUS. In this work, we aim to present a machine learning solution based on recent advances in adversarial training to investigate the feasibility of translating POCUS echo images to the quality level of high-end cart-based US systems.
METHODS: We propose a constrained cycle-consistent generative adversarial architecture for unpaired translation of cardiac POCUS to cart-based US data. We impose a structured shape-wise regularization via a critic segmentation network to preserve the underlying shape of the heart during quality translation. The proposed deep transfer model is constrained to the anatomy of the left ventricle (LV) in apical two-chamber (AP2) echo views.
RESULTS: A total of 1089 echo studies from 841 patients are used in this study. The AP2 frames are captured by POCUS (Philips Lumify and Clarius) and cart-based (Philips iE33 and Vivid E9) US machines. The dataset of quality translation comprises a total of 441 echo studies from 395 patients. Data from both POCUS and cart-based systems of the same patient were available in 122 cases. The deep-quality transfer model is integrated into a pipeline for an automated cardiac evaluation task, namely segmentation of LV in AP2 view. By transferring the low-quality POCUS data to the cart-based US, a significant average improvement of 30% and 34 mm is obtained in the LV segmentation Dice score and Hausdorff distance metrics, respectively.
CONCLUSION: This paper presents the feasibility of a machine learning solution to transform the image quality of POCUS data to that of high-quality high-end cart-based systems. The experiments show that by leveraging the quality translation through the proposed constrained adversarial training, the accuracy of automatic segmentation with POCUS data could be improved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adversarial training; Deep learning; Echocardiography; Image translation; Left ventricular ejection fraction; Point-of-care ultrasound

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32314226     DOI: 10.1007/s11548-020-02141-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg        ISSN: 1861-6410            Impact factor:   2.924


  4 in total

1.  Left ventricle analysis in echocardiographic images using transfer learning.

Authors:  Hafida Belfilali; Frédéric Bousefsaf; Mahammed Messadi
Journal:  Phys Eng Sci Med       Date:  2022-09-21

2.  Artificial Intelligence in Computer Vision: Cardiac MRI and Multimodality Imaging Segmentation.

Authors:  Alan C Kwan; Gerran Salto; Susan Cheng; David Ouyang
Journal:  Curr Cardiovasc Risk Rep       Date:  2021-08-04

3.  Technology trends and applications of deep learning in ultrasonography: image quality enhancement, diagnostic support, and improving workflow efficiency.

Authors:  Jonghyon Yi; Ho Kyung Kang; Jae-Hyun Kwon; Kang-Sik Kim; Moon Ho Park; Yeong Kyeong Seong; Dong Woo Kim; Byungeun Ahn; Kilsu Ha; Jinyong Lee; Zaegyoo Hah; Won-Chul Bang
Journal:  Ultrasonography       Date:  2020-09-14

Review 4.  Application of generative adversarial networks (GAN) for ophthalmology image domains: a survey.

Authors:  Aram You; Jin Kuk Kim; Ik Hee Ryu; Tae Keun Yoo
Journal:  Eye Vis (Lond)       Date:  2022-02-02
  4 in total

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