Seyedeh R. Mahmudi Nezhad Dezfouli; Y. Kyani; Seyed A. Mahmoudinejad Dezfouli
Abstract
Due to the small size, low contrast, variable position, shape, and texture of multiple sclerosis lesions, one of the challenges of medical image processing is the automatic diagnosis and segmentation of multiple sclerosis lesions in Magnetic resonance images. Early diagnosis of these lesions in the first ...
Read More
Due to the small size, low contrast, variable position, shape, and texture of multiple sclerosis lesions, one of the challenges of medical image processing is the automatic diagnosis and segmentation of multiple sclerosis lesions in Magnetic resonance images. Early diagnosis of these lesions in the first stages of the disease can effectively diagnose and evaluate treatment. Also, automated segmentation is a powerful tool to assist professionals in improving the accuracy of disease diagnosis. This study uses modified adaptive multi-level conditional random fields and the artificial neural network to segment and diagnose multiple sclerosis lesions. Instead of assuming model coefficients as constant, they are considered variables in multi-level statistical models. This study aimed to evaluate the probability of lesions based on the severity, texture, and adjacent areas. The proposed method is applied to 130 MR images of multiple sclerosis patients in two test stages and resulted in 98% precision. Also, the proposed method has reduced the error detection rate by correcting the lesion boundaries using the average intensity of neighborhoods, rotation invariant, and texture for very small voxels with a size of 3-5 voxels, and it has shown very few false-positive lesions. The proposed model resulted in a high sensitivity of 91% with a false positive average of 0.5.