Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-2021
Keywords
COVID-19; CXR; chest X-ray; portable CXR; conventional CXR; alignment; enhancement; deep learning; artificial intelligence
Abstract
This work aimed to assist physicians by improving their speed and diagnostic accuracy when interpreting portable CXRs as well as monitoring the treatment process to see whether a patient is improving or deteriorating with treatment. These objectives are in especially high demand in the setting of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. With the recent progress in the development of artificial intelligence (AI), we introduce new deep learning frameworks to align and enhance the quality of portable CXRs to be more consistent, and to more closely match higher quality conventional CXRs. These enhanced portable CXRs can then help the doctors provide faster and more accurate diagnosis and treatment planning. The contributions of this work are four-fold. Firstly, a new database collection of subject-pair radiographs is introduced. For each subject, we collected a pair of samples from both portable and conventional machines. Secondly, a new deep learning approach is presented to align the subject-pairs dataset to obtain a pixel-pairs dataset. Thirdly, a new PairFlow approach is presented, an end-to-end invertible transfer deep learning method, to enhance the degraded quality of portable CXRs. Finally, the performance of the proposed system is evaluated by UAMS doctors in terms of both image quality and topological properties. This work was undertaken in collaboration with the Department of Radiology at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) to enhance portable/mobile COVID-19 CXRs, to improve the speed and accuracy of portable CXR images and aid in urgent COVID-19 diagnosis, monitoring and treatment.
Citation
Le, N., Sorensen, J., Bui, T., Choudhary, A., Luu, K., & Nguyen, H. (2021). Enhance Portable Radiograph for Fast and High Accurate Covid-19 Monitoring. Diagnostics, 11 (6), 1080. https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11061080
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.