Deep Transfer Learning for Automatic Prediction of Hemorrhagic Stroke on CT Images.

Journal: Computational and mathematical methods in medicine
Published Date:

Abstract

Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is the most common type of hemorrhagic stroke which occurs due to ruptures of weakened blood vessel in brain tissue. It is a serious medical emergency issues that needs immediate treatment. Large numbers of noncontrast-computed tomography (NCCT) brain images are analyzed manually by radiologists to diagnose the hemorrhagic stroke, which is a difficult and time-consuming process. In this study, we propose an automated transfer deep learning method that combines ResNet-50 and dense layer for accurate prediction of intracranial hemorrhage on NCCT brain images. A total of 1164 NCCT brain images were collected from 62 patients with hemorrhagic stroke from Kalinga Institute of Medical Science, Bhubaneswar and used for evaluating the model. The proposed model takes individual CT images as input and classifies them as hemorrhagic or normal. This deep transfer learning approach reached 99.6% accuracy, 99.7% specificity, and 99.4% sensitivity which are better results than that of ResNet-50 only. It is evident that the deep transfer learning model has advantages for automatic diagnosis of hemorrhagic stroke and has the potential to be used as a clinical decision support tool to assist radiologists in stroke diagnosis.

Authors

  • B Nageswara Rao
    School of Electronics Engineering, Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology, Bhubaneswar, India.
  • Sudhansu Mohanty
    Department of Radio-Diagnosis, Kalinga Institute of Medical Science, Bhubaneswar, India.
  • Kamal Sen
    Hearing Research Center and Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University , Boston, Massachusetts 02215.
  • U Rajendra Acharya
    School of Business (Information Systems), Faculty of Business, Education, Law & Arts, University of Southern Queensland, Darling Heights, Australia.
  • Kang Hao Cheong
    Science, Mathematics and Technology, Singapore University of Technology and Design, 8 Somapah Road, Singapore 487372, Singapore.
  • Sukanta Sabut
    Department of Electronics Engineering, DY Patil Ramrao Adik Institute of Technology, Navi Mumbai, India. sukanta207@gmail.com.