Sensors (Aug 2021)

A Personalized Computer-Aided Diagnosis System for Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) Using Structural MRI (sMRI)

  • Fatma El-Zahraa A. El-Gamal,
  • Mohammed Elmogy,
  • Ali Mahmoud,
  • Ahmed Shalaby,
  • Andrew E. Switala,
  • Mohammed Ghazal,
  • Hassan Soliman,
  • Ahmed Atwan,
  • Norah Saleh Alghamdi,
  • Gregory Neal Barnes,
  • Ayman El-Baz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s21165416
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 16
p. 5416

Abstract

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Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder that targets the central nervous system (CNS). Statistics show that more than five million people in America face this disease. Several factors hinder diagnosis at an early stage, in particular, the divergence of 10–15 years between the onset of the underlying neuropathological changes and patients becoming symptomatic. This study surveyed patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), who were at risk of conversion to AD, with a local/regional-based computer-aided diagnosis system. The described system allowed for visualization of the disorder’s effect on cerebral cortical regions individually. The CAD system consists of four steps: (1) preprocess the scans and extract the cortex, (2) reconstruct the cortex and extract shape-based features, (3) fuse the extracted features, and (4) perform two levels of diagnosis: cortical region-based followed by global. The experimental results showed an encouraging performance of the proposed system when compared with related work, with a maximum accuracy of 86.30%, specificity 88.33%, and sensitivity 84.88%. Behavioral and cognitive correlations identified brain regions involved in language, executive function/cognition, and memory in MCI subjects, which regions are also involved in the neuropathology of AD.

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