Internet of Medical Things: An Effective and Fully Automatic IoT Approach Using Deep Learning and Fine-Tuning to Lung CT Segmentation.

Journal: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
Published Date:

Abstract

Several pathologies have a direct impact on society, causing public health problems. Pulmonary diseases such as Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are already the third leading cause of death in the world, leaving tuberculosis at ninth with 1.7 million deaths and over 10.4 million new occurrences. The detection of lung regions in images is a classic medical challenge. Studies show that computational methods contribute significantly to the medical diagnosis of lung pathologies by Computerized Tomography (CT), as well as through Internet of Things (IoT) methods based in the context on the health of things. The present work proposes a new model based on IoT for classification and segmentation of pulmonary CT images, applying the transfer learning technique in deep learning methods combined with Parzen's probability density. The proposed model uses an Application Programming Interface (API) based on the Internet of Medical Things to classify lung images. The approach was very effective, with results above 98% accuracy for classification in pulmonary images. Then the model proceeds to the lung segmentation stage using the Mask R-CNN network to create a pulmonary map and use fine-tuning to find the pulmonary borders on the CT image. The experiment was a success, the proposed method performed better than other works in the literature, reaching high segmentation metrics values such as accuracy of 98.34%. Besides reaching 5.43 s in segmentation time and overcoming other transfer learning models, our methodology stands out among the others because it is fully automatic. The proposed approach has simplified the segmentation process using transfer learning. It has introduced a faster and more effective method for better-performing lung segmentation, making our model fully automatic and robust.

Authors

  • Luís Fabrício de Freitas Souza
    Department of Computer Science, Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of Ceará, Fortaleza CE 60040-215, Brazil.
  • Iágson Carlos Lima Silva
    Department of Computer Science, Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of Ceará, Fortaleza CE 60040-215, Brazil.
  • Adriell Gomes Marques
    Department of Computer Science, Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of Ceará, Fortaleza CE 60040-215, Brazil.
  • Francisco Hércules Dos S Silva
    Department of Computer Science, Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of Ceará, Fortaleza CE 60040-215, Brazil.
  • Virgínia Xavier Nunes
    Department of Computer Science, Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of Ceará, Fortaleza CE 60040-215, Brazil.
  • Mohammad Mehedi Hassan
    Chia of Pervasive and Mobile Computing, College of Computer and Information Sciences, King Saud University, Riyadh, 11543, Saudi Arabia. mmhassan@ksu.edu.sa.
  • Victor Hugo C de Albuquerque
    Department of Computer Science, Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of Ceará, Fortaleza CE 60040-215, Brazil.
  • Pedro P Rebouças Filho
    Laboratório de Processamento de Imagens e Simulação Computacional, Instituto Federal de Educação, Ciência e Tecnologia do Ceará, Maracanaú, CE, Brazil.