access icon free Fully automated brain tumour segmentation system in 3D-MRI using symmetry analysis of brain and level sets

This study presents a new fully automated, fast, and accurate brain tumour segmentation method which automatically detects and extracts whole tumours from 3D-MRI. The proposed method is based on a hybrid approach that relies on a brain symmetry analysis method and a combining region-based and boundary-based segmentation methods. The segmentation process consists of three main stages. In the first one, image pre-processing is applied to remove any noise, and to extract the brain from the head image. In the second stage, automated tumour detection is performed. It is based essentially on FBB method using brain symmetry. The obtained result constitutes the automatic initialisation of a deformable model, thus removing the need of selecting the initial region of interest by the user. Finally, the third stage focuses on the application of region growing combined with 3D deformable model based on geodesic level-set to detect the tumour boundaries containing the initial region, computed previously, regardless of its shape and size. The proposed segmentation system has been tested and evaluated on 3D-MRIs of 285 subjects with different tumour types and shapes obtained from BraTS'2017 dataset. The obtained results turn out to be promising and objective as well as close to ground truth data.

Inspec keywords: neurophysiology; image segmentation; image classification; tumours; biomedical MRI; medical image processing; brain

Other keywords: brain tumour segmentation method; brain symmetry analysis method; three-dimensional deformable model; magnetic resonance imaging; image preprocessing; automated tumour detection; MRI volumes; manual segmentation performances; boundary-based segmentation methods; segmentation process; brain tumour segmentation system

Subjects: Other topics in statistics; Patient diagnostic methods and instrumentation; Biology and medical computing; Optical, image and video signal processing; Biomedical magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy; Computer vision and image processing techniques; Probability theory, stochastic processes, and statistics; Medical magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy; Other topics in statistics

http://iet.metastore.ingenta.com/content/journals/10.1049/iet-ipr.2017.1124
Loading

Related content

content/journals/10.1049/iet-ipr.2017.1124
pub_keyword,iet_inspecKeyword,pub_concept
6
6
Loading