Abstract

BackgroundMonitoring retinal oxygenation is of primary importance in detecting the presence of some common eye diseases. To improve the estimation of oxygen tension in retinal vessels, regularized least-squares (RLS) method was shown to be very effective compared with the conventional least-squares (LS) estimation. In this study, we propose an accelerated RLS estimation method for the problem of assessing the oxygenation of retinal vessels from phosphorescence lifetime images.MethodsIn the previous work, gradient descent algorithms were used to find the minimum of the RLS cost function. This approach is computationally expensive, especially when the oxygen tension map is large. In this study, using a closed-form solution of the RLS estimation and some inherent properties of the problem at hand, the RLS process is reduced to the weighted averaging of the LS estimates. This decreases the computational complexity of the RLS estimation considerably without sacrificing its performance.ResultsPerformance analyses are conducted using both real and simulated data sets. In terms of computational complexity, the proposed RLS estimation method is significantly better than RLS methods that use gradient descent algorithms to find the minimum of the cost function. Additionally, there is no significant difference between the estimates acquired by the proposed and conventional RLS estimation methods.ConclusionThe proposed RLS estimation method for computing the retinal oxygen tension is computationally efficient, and produces estimates with negligible difference from those obtained by iterative RLS methods. Further, the results of this study can be applied to other lifetime imaging problems that have similar properties.

Highlights

  • Monitoring retinal oxygenation is of primary importance in detecting the presence of some common eye diseases

  • The regularized least-squares (RLS) method implemented in an iterative way can handle oxygen tension images having this size of frames but as shown in the Simulated and Experimental Data Results Section, it becomes slower as size of the images gets larger

  • The proposed method is limited by the assumption made when developing the regularization window that variation among oxygen tension values of retinal vessels within this size of window should be minimal

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Summary

Methods

Gradient descent algorithms were used to find the minimum of the RLS cost function. This approach is computationally expensive, especially when the oxygen tension map is large. In this study, using a closed-form solution of the RLS estimation and some inherent properties of the problem at hand, the RLS process is reduced to the weighted averaging of the LS estimates. This decreases the computational complexity of the RLS estimation considerably without sacrificing its performance

Results
Conclusion
Background
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