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Evaluation of Ischemic Penumbra in Stroke Patients Based on Deep Learning and Multimodal CT
Author(s) -
Changhua Liu,
Tao Qin,
Liangjin Liu
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of healthcare engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.509
H-Index - 29
eISSN - 2040-2309
pISSN - 2040-2295
DOI - 10.1155/2021/3215107
Subject(s) - penumbra , upsampling , thrombolysis , subnet , artificial intelligence , segmentation , computer science , stroke (engine) , lesion , path (computing) , medicine , ischemia , cardiology , myocardial infarction , surgery , engineering , computer network , mechanical engineering , image (mathematics)
In order to investigate the value of multimodal CT for quantitative assessment of collateral circulation, ischemic semidark zone, core infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS), and prognosis assessment in intravenous thrombolytic therapy, segmentation model which is based on the self-attention mechanism is prone to generate attention coefficient maps with incorrect regions of interest. Moreover, the stroke lesion is not clearly characterized, and lesion boundary is poorly differentiated from normal brain tissue, thus affecting the segmentation performance. To address this problem, a primary and secondary path attention compensation network structure is proposed, which is based on the improved global attention upsampling U-Net model. The main path network is responsible for performing accurate lesion segmentation and outputting segmentation results. Likewise, the auxiliary path network generates loose auxiliary attention compensation coefficients, which compensate for possible attention coefficient errors in the main path network. Two hybrid loss functions are proposed to realize the respective functions of main and auxiliary path networks. It is experimentally demonstrated that both the improved global attention upsampling U-Net and the proposed primary and secondary path attention compensation networks show significant improvement in segmentation performance. Moreover, patients with good collateral circulation have a small final infarct area volume and a good clinical prognosis after intravenous thrombolysis. Quantitative assessment of collateral circulation and ischemic semidark zone by multimodal CT can better predict the clinical prognosis of intravenous thrombolysis.

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