6533b832fe1ef96bd129a24e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Retinal vasculature segmentation and measurement framework for color fundus and SLO images
Luca GiancardoPrasanna PorwalSamiksha PachadeManesh KokareFabrice Meriaudeausubject
business.industryComputer scienceBiomedical EngineeringRetinalVascular geometryFundus (eye)Scanning laser ophthalmoscopychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryIterative thresholdingAutomatic segmentationGraph (abstract data type)SegmentationComputer visionArtificial intelligencebusinessdescription
Abstract The change in vascular geometry is an indicator of various health issues linked with vision and cardiovascular risk factors. Early detection and diagnosis of these changes can help patients to select an appropriate treatment option when the disease is in its primary phase. Automatic segmentation and quantification of these vessels would decrease the cost and eliminate inconsistency related to manual grading. However, automatic detection of the vessels is challenging in the presence of retinal pathologies and non-uniform illumination, two common occurrences in clinical settings. This paper presents a novel framework to address the issue of retinal blood vessel detection and width measurement under these challenging circumstances and also on two different imaging modalities: color fundus imaging and Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscopy (SLO). In this framework, initially, vessel enhancement is done using linear recursive filtering. Then, a unique combination of morphological operations, background estimation, and iterative thresholding are applied to segment the blood vessels. Further, vessel diameter is estimated in two steps: firstly, vessel centerlines are extracted using the graph-based algorithm. Then, vessel edges are localized from the image profiles, by utilizing spline fitting to obtain vascular orientations and then finding the zero-crossings. Extensive experiments have been carried out on several publicly accessible datasets for vessel segmentation and diameter measurement, i.e., DRIVE, STARE, IOSTAR, RC-SLO and REVIEW dataset. Results demonstrate the competitive and comparable performance than earlier methods. The encouraging quantitative and visual performance of the proposed framework makes it an important component of a decision support system for retinal images.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-07-01 | Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering |