Deep Learning based Skin-layer Segmentation for Characterizing Cutaneous Wounds from Optical Coherence Tomography Images

2 Jun 2023  ·  Prashant Kumar, Swatantra Dhara, Ayan Gope, Jyotirmoy Chatterjee, Subhamoy Mandal ·

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a medical imaging modality that allows us to probe deeper substructures of skin. The state-of-the-art wound care prediction and monitoring methods are based on visual evaluation and focus on surface information. However, research studies have shown that sub-surface information of the wound is critical for understanding the wound healing progression. This work demonstrated the use of OCT as an effective imaging tool for objective and non-invasive assessments of wound severity, the potential for healing, and healing progress by measuring the optical characteristics of skin components. We have demonstrated the efficacy of OCT in studying wound healing progress in vivo small animal models. Automated analysis of OCT datasets poses multiple challenges, such as limitations in the training dataset size, variation in data distribution induced by uncertainties in sample quality and experiment conditions. We have employed a U-Net-based model for the segmentation of skin layers based on OCT images and to study epithelial and regenerated tissue thickness wound closure dynamics and thus quantify the progression of wound healing. In the experimental evaluation of the OCT skin image datasets, we achieved the objective of skin layer segmentation with an average intersection over union (IOU) of 0.9234. The results have been corroborated using gold-standard histology images and co-validated using inputs from pathologists. Clinical Relevance: To monitor wound healing progression without disrupting the healing procedure by superficial, noninvasive means via the identification of pixel characteristics of individual layers.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Tasks


Datasets


  Add Datasets introduced or used in this paper

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods