Musculoskeletal ultrasound imaging is an important basis for the early screening and accurate treatment of muscle disorders. It allows the observation of muscle status to screen for underlying neuromuscular diseases including myasthenia gravis, myotonic dystrophy, and ankylosing muscular dystrophy. Due to the complexity of skeletal muscle ultrasound image noise, it is a tedious and time-consuming process to analyze. Therefore, we proposed a multi-task learning-based approach to automatically segment and initially diagnose transverse musculoskeletal ultrasound images. The method implements muscle cross-sectional area (CSA) segmentation and abnormal muscle classification by constructing a multi-task model based on multi-scale fusion and attention mechanisms (MMA-Net). The model exploits the correlation between tasks by sharing a part of the shallow network and adding connections to exchange information in the deep network. The multi-scale feature fusion module and attention mechanism were added to MMA-Net to increase the receptive field and enhance the feature extraction ability. Experiments were conducted using a total of 1827 medial gastrocnemius ultrasound images from multiple subjects. Ten percent of the samples were randomly selected for testing, 10% as the validation set, and the remaining 80% as the training set. The results show that the proposed network structure and the added modules are effective. Compared with advanced single-task models and existing analysis methods, our method has a better performance at classification and segmentation. The mean Dice coefficients and IoU of muscle cross-sectional area segmentation were 96.74% and 94.10%, respectively. The accuracy and recall of abnormal muscle classification were 95.60% and 94.96%. The proposed method achieves convenient and accurate analysis of transverse musculoskeletal ultrasound images, which can assist physicians in the diagnosis and treatment of muscle diseases from multiple perspectives.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/e25040662 | DOI Listing |
Indian J Orthop
January 2025
Department of Orthopedics, Hand, and Reconstructive Microsurgery, Olympia Hospital & Research Centre, 47, 47A Puthur High Road, Puthur, Trichy, Tamilnadu 620017 India.
Background: Musculoskeletal ultrasonography of the hand and wrist is becoming the trend in assessing and diagnosing most hand and wrist injuries, soft-tissue mass, and occult fractures. Its advantages include ultra-high frequency probes, noninvasiveness, cost-effectiveness, lack of ionising radiation, and portability. The patients are comfortable doing this procedure in the outpatient department, and visualising the ultrasound images increases their confidence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Bras Ortop (Sao Paulo)
November 2024
Departamento de Cirurgia Ortopédica, Fundación Cardioinfantil, Instituto de Cardiología, Bogotá, Colômbia.
Patients with hemophilia disease have a high risk of hemorrhage. Most hemorrhages can occur in the musculoskeletal system, presenting as hematomas, or, in rare occasions, as hemophilic pseudotumors, an uncommon pathology that are often misdiagnosed as musculoskeletal tumors because of their clinical behavior and characteristics on diagnostic imaging. Despite many treatment options, surgical excision is the treatment of choice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
November 2024
Trauma and Orthopaedics, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, Birmingham, GBR.
Greater trochanteric pain syndrome (GTPS) is a prevalent musculoskeletal condition characterised by lateral hip pain and reduced function. Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections have gained attention as a potential treatment due to their regenerative properties. However, variability in PRP preparation methods and insufficient standardisation in the literature complicate the evaluation of its efficacy and reproducibility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAustralas J Ultrasound Med
November 2024
Imaging Associates Group Box Hill Victoria Australia.
Introduction: Iatrogenic and traumatic injuries to the femoral and saphenous nerves, and their branches are uncommon but can be a cause of clinically pertinent lower limb dysfunction and neuralgia. Despite this, direct sonographic imaging of these nerves is not commonly requested or performed.
Methods: A review of the literature regarding the detailed relative anatomy, sonographic technique to image these nerves and their branches and their normal and abnormal appearances was conducted.
Biomed Tech (Berl)
December 2024
Institute for Artificial Intelligence in Medicine (IKIM), University Hospital Essen (AöR), Essen, Germany.
Objectives: The shape is commonly used to describe the objects. State-of-the-art algorithms in medical imaging are predominantly diverging from computer vision, where voxel grids, meshes, point clouds, and implicit surface models are used. This is seen from the growing popularity of ShapeNet (51,300 models) and Princeton ModelNet (127,915 models).
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