Summary: | Changes in the retinal vessel caliber are associated with a variety of major diseases, namely diabetes, hypertension and atherosclerosis. The clinical assessment of these changes in fundus images is tiresome and prone to errors and thus automatic methods are desirable for objective and precise caliber measurement. However, the variability of blood vessel appearance, image quality and resolution make the development of these tools a non-trivial task.A method for the estimation of vessel caliber in eye fundus images via vessel cross-sectional intensity profile model fitting is herein proposed. First, the vessel centerlines are determined and individual segments are extracted and smoothed by spline approximation. Then, the corresponding cross-sectional intensity profiles are determined, post-processed and ultimately fitted by newly proposed parametric models. These models are based on Difference-of-Gaussians (DoG) curves modified through a multiplying line with varying inclination. With this, the proposed models can describe profile asymmetry, allowing a good adjustment to the most difficult profiles, namely those showing central light reflex. Finally, the parameters of the best-fit model are used to determine the vessel width using ensembles of bagged regression trees with random feature selection.The performance of our approach is evaluated on the REVIEW public dataset by comparing the vessel cross-sectional profile fitting of the proposed modified DoG models with 7 and 8 parameters against a Hermite model with 6 parameters. Results on different goodness of fitness metrics indicate that our models are constantly better at fitting the vessel profiles. Furthermore, our width measurement algorithm achieves a precision close to the observers, outperforming state-of-the art methods, and retrieving the highest precision when evaluated using cross-validation. This high performance supports the robustness of the algorithm and validates its use in retinal vessel width measurement and possible integration in a system for retinal vasculature assessment.
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