論文

査読有り
2015年10月1日

Automatic classification framework for ventricular septal defects: A pilot study on high-throughput mouse embryo cardiac phenotyping

Journal of Medical Imaging
  • Zhongliu Xie
  • ,
  • Xi Liang
  • ,
  • Liucheng Guo
  • ,
  • Asanobu Kitamoto
  • ,
  • Masaru Tamura
  • ,
  • Toshihiko Shiroishi
  • ,
  • Duncan Gillies

2
4
開始ページ
041003
終了ページ
041003
記述言語
英語
掲載種別
研究論文(学術雑誌)
DOI
10.1117/1.JMI.2.4.041003
出版者・発行元
SPIE

Intensive international efforts are underway toward phenotyping the entire mouse genome by modifying all its ≈25,000 genes one-by-one for comparative studies. A workload of this scale has triggered numerous studies harnessing image informatics for the identification of morphological defects. However, existing work in this line primarily rests on abnormality detection via structural volumetrics between wild-type and gene-modified mice, which generally fails when the pathology involves no severe volume changes, such as ventricular septal defects (VSDs) in the heart. Furthermore, in embryo cardiac phenotyping, the lack of relevant work in embryonic heart segmentation, the limited availability of public atlases, and the general requirement of manual labor for the actual phenotype classification after abnormality detection, along with other limitations, have collectively restricted existing practices from meeting the high-throughput demands. This study proposes, to the best of our knowledge, the first fully automatic VSD classification framework in mouse embryo imaging. Our approach leverages a combination of atlas-based segmentation and snake evolution techniques to derive the segmentation of heart ventricles, where VSD classification is achieved by checking whether the left and right ventricles border or overlap with each other. A pilot study has validated our approach at a proof-of-concept level and achieved a classification accuracy of 100% through a series of empirical experiments on a database of 15 images.

リンク情報
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JMI.2.4.041003
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26835488
ID情報
  • DOI : 10.1117/1.JMI.2.4.041003
  • ISSN : 2329-4310
  • ISSN : 2329-4302
  • PubMed ID : 26835488
  • SCOPUS ID : 84978376034

エクスポート
BibTeX RIS