Logo image
MobilePTX: Sparse Coding for Pneumothorax Detection Given Limited Training Examples
Journal article   Open access

MobilePTX: Sparse Coding for Pneumothorax Detection Given Limited Training Examples

Darryl Hannan, Steven C. Nesbit, Ximing Wen, Glen Smith, Qiao Zhang, Alberto Goffi, Vincent Chan, Michael J. Morris, John C. Hunninghake, Nicholas E. Villalobos, …
Proceedings of the ... AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, v 37(13), pp 15675-15681
26 Jun 2023
url
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.06.14.448452View
Published, Version of Record (VoR)Open Access (License Unspecified) Open
url
https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v37i13.26859View
Published, Version of Record (VoR) Open

Abstract

Point-of-Care Ultrasound (POCUS) refers to clinician-performed and interpreted ultrasonography at the patient's bedside. Interpreting these images requires a high level of expertise, which may not be available during emergencies. In this paper, we support POCUS by developing classifiers that can aid medical professionals by diagnosing whether or not a patient has pneumothorax. We decomposed the task into multiple steps, using YOLOv4 to extract relevant regions of the video and a 3D sparse coding model to represent video features. Given the difficulty in acquiring positive training videos, we trained a small-data classifier with a maximum of 15 positive and 32 negative examples. To counteract this limitation, we leveraged subject matter expert (SME) knowledge to limit the hypothesis space, thus reducing the cost of data collection. We present results using two lung ultrasound datasets and demonstrate that our model is capable of achieving performance on par with SMEs in pneumothorax identification. We then developed an iOS application that runs our full system in less than 4 seconds on an iPad Pro, and less than 8 seconds on an iPhone 13 Pro, labeling key regions in the lung sonogram to provide interpretable diagnoses.

Metrics

28 Record Views
4 citations in Scopus

Details

Logo image