Paper
24 March 2016 Automated detection of retinal whitening in malarial retinopathy
V. Joshi, C. Agurto , S. Barriga, S. Nemeth, P. Soliz, I. MacCormick, T. Taylor, S. Lewallen, S. Harding
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Cerebral malaria (CM) is a severe neurological complication associated with malarial infection. Malaria affects approximately 200 million people worldwide, and claims 600,000 lives annually, 75% of whom are African children under five years of age. Because most of these mortalities are caused by the high incidence of CM misdiagnosis, there is a need for an accurate diagnostic to confirm the presence of CM. The retinal lesions associated with malarial retinopathy (MR) such as retinal whitening, vessel discoloration, and hemorrhages, are highly specific to CM, and their detection can improve the accuracy of CM diagnosis. This paper will focus on development of an automated method for the detection of retinal whitening which is a unique sign of MR that manifests due to retinal ischemia resulting from CM. We propose to detect the whitening region in retinal color images based on multiple color and textural features. First, we preprocess the image using color and textural features of the CMYK and CIE-XYZ color spaces to minimize camera reflex. Next, we utilize color features of the HSL, CMYK, and CIE-XYZ channels, along with the structural features of difference of Gaussians. A watershed segmentation algorithm is used to assign each image region a probability of being inside the whitening, based on extracted features. The algorithm was applied to a dataset of 54 images (40 with whitening and 14 controls) that resulted in an image-based (binary) classification with an AUC of 0.80. This provides 88% sensitivity at a specificity of 65%. For a clinical application that requires a high specificity setting, the algorithm can be tuned to a specificity of 89% at a sensitivity of 82%. This is the first published method for retinal whitening detection and combining it with the detection methods for vessel discoloration and hemorrhages can further improve the detection accuracy for malarial retinopathy.
© (2016) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
V. Joshi, C. Agurto , S. Barriga, S. Nemeth, P. Soliz, I. MacCormick, T. Taylor, S. Lewallen, and S. Harding "Automated detection of retinal whitening in malarial retinopathy", Proc. SPIE 9785, Medical Imaging 2016: Computer-Aided Diagnosis, 97852G (24 March 2016); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2217188
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CITATIONS
Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image segmentation

Cameras

Diagnostics

Image processing

Control systems

Feature extraction

Image processing algorithms and systems

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