Journal of Medical Signals and Sensors (Jan 2020)

Forming optimal projection images from intra-retinal layers using curvelet-based image fusion method

  • Jalil Jalili,
  • Hossein Rabbani,
  • Alireza Mehri Dehnavi,
  • Raheleh Kafieh,
  • Mohammadreza Akhlaghi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jmss.JMSS_43_19
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
pp. 76 – 85

Abstract

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Background: Image fusion is the process of combining the information of several input images into one image. Projection images obtained from three-dimensional (3D) optical coherence tomography (OCT) can show inlier retinal pathology and abnormalities that are not visible in conventional fundus images. In recent years, the projection image is often made by an average on all retina that causes to lose many intraretinal details. Methods: In this study, we focus on the formation of optimum projection images from retinal layers using Curvelet-based image fusion. The latter consists of three main steps. In the earlier studies, macular spectral 3D data using diffusion map-based OCT were segmented into 12 different boundaries identifying 11 retinal layers in three dimensions. In the second step, projection images are attained using conducting some statistical methods on the space between each pair of boundaries. In the next step, retinal layers are merged using Curvelet transform to make the final projection images. Results: These images contain integrated retinal depth information as well as an ideal opportunity to better extract retinal features such as vessels and the macula region. Finally, qualitative and quantitative evaluations show the superiority of this method to the average-based and wavelet-based fusion methods. Overall, our method obtains the best results for image fusion in all terms such as entropy (6.7744) and AG (9.5491). Conclusion: Creating an image with more and detailed information made by the Curvelet-based image fusion has significantly higher contrast. There are also many thin veins in Curvelet-based fused image, which are absent in average-based and wavelet-based fused images.

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