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Detecting the Early Infarct Core on Non-Contrast CT Images with a Deep Learning Residual Network.

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Abstract

To explore a new approach mainly based on deep learning residual network (ResNet) to detect infarct cores on non-contrast CT images and improve the accuracy of acute ischemic stroke diagnosis.
We continuously enrolled magnetic resonance diffusion weighted image (MR-DWI) confirmed first-episode ischemic stroke patients (onset time: less than 9 h) as well as some normal individuals in this study. They all underwent CT plain scan and MR-DWI scan with same scanning range, layer thickness (4 mm) and interlayer spacing (4 mm) (The time interval between two examinations: less than 4 h). Setting MR-DWI as gold standard of infarct core and using deep learning ResNet combined with a maximum a posteriori probability (MAP) model and a post-processing method to detect the infarct core on non-contrast CT images. After that, we use decision curve analysis (DCA) establishing models to analyze the value of this new method in clinical practice.
116 ischemic stroke patients and 26 normal people were enrolled. 58 patients were allocated into training dataset and 58 were divided into testing dataset along with 26 normal samples. The identification accuracy of our ResNet based approach in detecting the infarct core on non-contrast CT is 75.9%. The DCA shows that this deep learning method is capable of improving the net benefit of ischemic stroke patients.
Our deep learning residual network assisted with optimization methods is able to detect early infarct core on non-contrast CT images and has the potential to help physicians improve diagnostic accuracy in acute ischemic stroke patients.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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