Toward Better Utilization of Medical Images
An area that this research will investigate is to improve the
detection and classification of breast tumours. Currently,
mammography is the widely used tool to examine and screen
breast tumours. However, mammography has several
disadvantages. For example, it uses X-ray radiation, which may
result in harmful effects on breast tissues over prolonged
use. Moreover, mammograms sensitivity is very low when used
to screen young women or women with dense breasts. On the
contrary, ultrasound imaging has no known side effects
(neither short-term nor long-term),. In addition, ultrasound
imaging is less expensive than other screening systems. This
research will investigate several approaches and techniques
to combine various ultrasound image data (e.g., B-Mode and
Doppler). The objective is to identify and differentiate
between benign and malignant tumours.
Another area of investigation is to improve the detection of
carotid artery plaque in three-dimensional images. It is
believed that this type of plaque is caused by
Atherosclerosis. Currently, most plaque detection is done
using two-dimensional ultrasound images. Yet,
three-dimensional ultrasound images, which can provide vessel
and plaque volumes, are available, and are just as cost
effective as their two-dimensional cousins. Since
three-dimensional ultrasound will surely be the future of
clinical trials, three-dimensional automatic segmentation
will give an accurate measurement of plaque levels.
This research will develop several customized
image-processing techniques including: image enhancement
techniques (to reduce the effect of noise in images), image
registration techniques (to combine the multi-modal data),
and image segmentation/classification techniques (to reduce
the radiologist's interaction time with the CAD system).