Segmentation of nine target intra-retinal layer boundaries. The 1st row shows the segmentations by our geodesic distance method. The 2nd row shows ground truth made by an expert ophthalmologist

Automated segmentation of retinal layers from optical coherent tomography images using geodesic distance

Abstract

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a noninvasive imaging technique that can produce images of the eye at the microscopic level. OCT image segmentation to detect retinal layer boundaries is a fundamental procedure for diagnosing and monitoring the progression of retinal and optical nerve diseases. In this paper, we introduce a novel and accurate segmentation method based on geodesic distance for both two and three dimensional OCT images. The geodesic distance is weighted by an exponential function, which takes into account both horizontal and vertical intensity variations in the image. The weighted geodesic distance is efficiently calculated from an Eikonal equation via the fast sweeping method. Segmentation then proceeds by solving an ordinary differential equation of the geodesic distance. The performance of the proposed method is compared with manual segmentation. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed method is robust to complex retinal structures with large curvature variations and irregularities and it outperforms the parametric active contour algorithm as well as graph based approaches for segmenting retinal layers in both healthy and pathological images.

Publication
Pattern Recognition
Date

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