IVJun 2, 2023
Morphology Edge Attention Network and Optimal Geometric Matching Connection model for vascular segmentationYuntao Zhu, Yuxuan Qiao, Xiaoping Yang
There are many unsolved problems in vascular image segmentation, including vascular structural connectivity, scarce branches and missing small vessels. Obtaining vessels that preserve their correct topological structures is currently a crucial research issue, as it provides an overall view of one vascular system. In order to preserve the topology and accuracy of vessel segmentation, we proposed a novel Morphology Edge Attention Network (MEA-Net) for the segmentation of vessel-like structures, and an Optimal Geometric Matching Connection (OGMC) model to connect the broken vessel segments. The MEA-Net has an edge attention module that improves the segmentation of edges and small objects by morphology operation extracting boundary voxels on multi-scale. The OGMC model uses the concept of curve touching from differential geometry to filter out fragmented vessel endpoints, and then employs minimal surfaces to determine the optimal connection order between blood vessels. Finally, we calculate the geodesic to repair missing vessels under a given Riemannian metric. Our method achieves superior or competitive results compared to state-of-the-art methods on four datasets of 3D vascular segmentation tasks, both effectively reducing vessel broken and increasing vessel branch richness, yielding blood vessels with a more precise topological structure.
IVApr 27, 2020
Towards Data-Efficient Learning: A Benchmark for COVID-19 CT Lung and Infection SegmentationJun Ma, Yixin Wang, Xingle An et al.
Purpose: Accurate segmentation of lung and infection in COVID-19 CT scans plays an important role in the quantitative management of patients. Most of the existing studies are based on large and private annotated datasets that are impractical to obtain from a single institution, especially when radiologists are busy fighting the coronavirus disease. Furthermore, it is hard to compare current COVID-19 CT segmentation methods as they are developed on different datasets, trained in different settings, and evaluated with different metrics. Methods: To promote the development of data-efficient deep learning methods, in this paper, we built three benchmarks for lung and infection segmentation based on 70 annotated COVID-19 cases, which contain current active research areas, e.g., few-shot learning, domain generalization, and knowledge transfer. For a fair comparison among different segmentation methods, we also provide standard training, validation and testing splits, evaluation metrics and, the corresponding code. Results: Based on the state-of-the-art network, we provide more than 40 pre-trained baseline models, which not only serve as out-of-the-box segmentation tools but also save computational time for researchers who are interested in COVID-19 lung and infection segmentation. We achieve average Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC) scores of 97.3\%, 97.7\%, and 67.3\% and average Normalized Surface Dice (NSD) scores of 90.6\%, 91.4\%, and 70.0\% for left lung, right lung, and infection, respectively. Conclusions: To the best of our knowledge, this work presents the first data-efficient learning benchmark for medical image segmentation and the largest number of pre-trained models up to now. All these resources are publicly available, and our work lays the foundation for promoting the development of deep learning methods for efficient COVID-19 CT segmentation with limited data.