Abstract

Accurate segmentation of retinal blood vessels is crucial for enhancing diagnostic efficiency and preventing disease progression. However, the small size and complex structure of retinal blood vessels, coupled with low contrast in corresponding fundus images, pose significant challenges for this task. We propose a novel approach for retinal vessel segmentation, which combines the transformer and convolutional dual-path decoding U-Net (TCDDU-Net). We propose the selective dense connection swin transformer block, which converts the input feature map into patches, introduces MLPs to generate probabilities, and performs selective fusion at different stages. This structure forms a dense connection framework, enabling the capture of long-distance dependencies and effective fusion of features across different stages. The subsequent stage involves the design of the background decoder, which utilizes deformable convolution to learn the background information of retinal vessels by treating them as segmentation objects. This is then combined with the foreground decoder to form a dual-path decoding U-Net. Finally, the foreground segmentation results and the processed background segmentation results are fused to obtain the final retinal vessel segmentation map. To evaluate the effectiveness of our method, we performed experiments on the DRIVE, STARE, and CHASE datasets for retinal vessel segmentation. Experimental results show that the segmentation accuracies of our algorithms are 96.98, 97.40, and 97.23, and the AUC metrics are 98.68, 98.56, and 98.50, respectively.In addition, we evaluated our methods using F1 score, specificity, and sensitivity metrics. Through a comparative analysis, we found that our proposed TCDDU-Net method effectively improves retinal vessel segmentation performance and achieves impressive results on multiple datasets compared to existing methods.

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