Abstract

Background and objective: Retinal microaneurysm (MA) is one of the earliest clinical signs of diabetic retinopathy(DR). Its detection is essential for controlling DR and preventing vision loss. However, the spatial scale of MA is extremely small and the contrast to surrounding background is subtle, which make MA detection challenging. The purpose of this work is to automatically detect MAs from fundus images. Methods: Our MA detector involves two stages: MA candidate extraction and classification. In MA candidate extraction stage, local minimum region extraction and block filtering are used to exploit the regions where MA may exist. In this way, most of irrelavent background regions are discarded , which subsequently facilitates the training of MA classifier. In the second stage, multiple features are extracted to train the MA classifier. To distinguish MA from vascular regions, we propose a series of descriptors according to the cross-section profile of MA. Specially, as MAs are small and their contrast to surroundings is subtle, we propose local cross-section transformation (LCT) to amplify the difference between the MA and confusing structures. Finally, an under-sampling boosting-based classifier (RUSBoost) is trained to determine whether the candidate is an MA. Results: The proposed method is evaluated on three public available databases i.e. e-ophtha-MA, DiaretDB1 and ROC training set. It achieves high sensitivities for low false positive rates on the three databases. Using the FROC metric, the final scores are 0.516, 0.402 and 0.293 respectively, which are comparable to existing state-of-the-art methods. Conclusions: The proposed local cross-section transformation enhances the discrimination of descriptors by amplifying difference between MAs and confusing structures, which facilitates the classification and improves the detection performances. With the powerful descriptors, our method achieves state-of-the-art performances on three public datasets consistently.

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