Abstract

BackgroundGastrointestinal (GI) infections are quite common today around the world. Colonoscopy or wireless capsule endoscopy (WCE) are noninvasive methods for examining the whole GI tract for abnormalities. Nevertheless, it requires a great deal of time and effort for doctors to visualize a large number of images, and diagnosis is prone to human error. As a result, developing automated artificial intelligence (AI) based GI disease diagnosis methods is a crucial and emerging research area. AI-based prediction models may lead to improvements in the early diagnosis of gastrointestinal disorders, assessing severity, and healthcare systems for the benefit of patients as well as clinicians. The focus of this research is on the early diagnosis of gastrointestinal diseases using a convolution neural network (CNN) to enhance diagnosis accuracy. MethodsVarious CNN models (baseline model and using transfer learning (VGG16, InceptionV3, and ResNet50)) were trained on a benchmark image dataset, KVASIR, containing images from inside the GI tract using n-fold cross-validation. The dataset comprises images of three disease states—polyps, ulcerative colitis, and esophagitis—as well as images of the healthy colon. Data augmentation strategies together with statistical measures were used to improve and evaluate the model's performance. Additionally, the test set comprising 1200 images was used to evaluate the model's accuracy and robustness. ResultsThe CNN model using the weights of the ResNet50 pre-trained model achieved the highest average accuracy of approximately 99.80% on the training set (100% precision and approximately 99% recall) and accuracies of 99.50% and 99.16% on the validation and additional test set, respectively, while diagnosing GI diseases. When compared to other existing systems, the proposed ResNet50 model outperforms them all. ConclusionThe findings of this study indicate that AI-based prediction models using CNNs, specifically ResNet50, can improve diagnostic accuracy for detecting gastrointestinal polyps, ulcerative colitis, and esophagitis. The prediction model is available at https://github.com/anjus02/GI-disease-classification.git.

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