Automatic detection of diabetic foot complications with infrared thermography by asymmetric analysis


Autoria(s): Liu, Chanjuan; van Netten, Jaap J.; Van Baal, Jeff G.; Bus, Sicco A.; van Der Heijden, Ferdi
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

Early identification of diabetic foot complications and their precursors is essential in preventing their devastating consequences, such as foot infection and amputation. Frequent, automatic risk assessment by an intelligent telemedicine system might be feasible and cost effective. Infrared thermography is a promising modality for such a system. The temperature differences between corresponding areas on contralateral feet are the clinically significant parameters. This asymmetric analysis is hindered by (1) foot segmentation errors, especially when the foot temperature and the ambient temperature are comparable, and by (2) different shapes and sizes between contralateral feet due to deformities or minor amputations. To circumvent the first problem, we used a color image and a thermal image acquired synchronously. Foot regions, detected in the color image, were rigidly registered to the thermal image. This resulted in 97.8% ± 1.1% sensitivity and 98.4% ± 0.5% specificity over 76 high-risk diabetic patients with manual annotation as a reference. Nonrigid landmark-based registration with Bsplines solved the second problem. Corresponding points in the two feet could be found regardless of the shapes and sizes of the feet. With that, the temperature difference of the left and right feet could be obtained.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/93264/

Publicador

International Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/93264/1/Liu%20et%20al%20-%202015%20-%20infrared%20asymmetric%20analysis.pdf

DOI:10.1117/1.JBO.20.2.026003

Liu, Chanjuan, van Netten, Jaap J., Van Baal, Jeff G., Bus, Sicco A., & van Der Heijden, Ferdi (2015) Automatic detection of diabetic foot complications with infrared thermography by asymmetric analysis. Journal of Biomedical Optics, 20(2), -026003.

Direitos

Copyright 2015 SPIE

Fonte

School of Clinical Sciences; Faculty of Health

Palavras-Chave #110000 MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES #asymmetric analysis #diabetic foot complications #inflammation #infrared imaging #prevention #telemedicine #thermal image segmentation
Tipo

Journal Article