AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to create an automatic algorithm for detecting and classifying ductopenia in parotid glands, which is linked to salivary gland impairment, using sialo cone-beam CT (sialo-CBCT) images.
  • The research involved an automated pipeline with three steps: computing regions of interest (ROIs), segmenting the parotid gland using a Frangi filter, and classifying ductopenia severity with a residual neural network (RNN) enhanced by maximum intensity projection (MIP) images.
  • Evaluation of the algorithm on 126 scans showed excellent accuracy in ROI computation (100%) and gland segmentation (89%), with significant improvements in the detection of ductopenia severity, indicating its potential

Article Abstract

Purpose: This study addressed the challenge of detecting and classifying the severity of ductopenia in parotid glands, a structural abnormality characterized by a reduced number of salivary ducts, previously shown to be associated with salivary gland impairment. The aim of the study was to develop an automatic algorithm designed to improve diagnostic accuracy and efficiency in analyzing ductopenic parotid glands using sialo cone-beam CT (sialo-CBCT) images.

Methods: We developed an end-to-end automatic pipeline consisting of three main steps: (1) region of interest (ROI) computation, (2) parotid gland segmentation using the Frangi filter, and (3) ductopenia case classification with a residual neural network (RNN) augmented by multidirectional maximum intensity projection (MIP) images. To explore the impact of the first two steps, the RNN was trained on three datasets: (1) original MIP images, (2) MIP images with predefined ROIs, and (3) MIP images after segmentation.

Results: Evaluation was conducted on 126 parotid sialo-CBCT scans of normal, moderate, and severe ductopenic cases, yielding a high performance of 100% for the ROI computation and 89% for the gland segmentation. Improvements in accuracy and F1 score were noted among the original MIP images (accuracy: 0.73, F1 score: 0.53), ROI-predefined images (accuracy: 0.78, F1 score: 0.56), and segmented images (accuracy: 0.95, F1 score: 0.90). Notably, ductopenic detection sensitivity was 0.99 in the segmented dataset, highlighting the capabilities of the algorithm in detecting ductopenic cases.

Conclusions: Our method, which combines classical image processing and deep learning techniques, offers a promising solution for automatic detection of parotid glands ductopenia in sialo-CBCT scans. This may be used for further research aimed at understanding the role of presence and severity of ductopenia in salivary gland dysfunction.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11548-024-03240-wDOI Listing

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