The optimal connection model for blood vessels segmentation and the MEA-Net
Vascular diseases have long been regarded as a significant health concern. Accurately detecting the location, shape, and afflicted regions of blood vessels from a diverse range of medical images has proven to be a major challenge. Obtaining blood vessels that retain their correct topological structures is currently a crucial research issue. Numerous efforts have sought to reinforce neural networks' learning of vascular geometric features, including measures to ensure the correct topological structure of the segmentation result's vessel centerline. Typically, these methods extract topological features from the network's segmentation result and then apply regular constraints to reinforce the accuracy of critical components and the overall topological structure. However, as blood vessels are three-dimensional structures, it is essential to achieve complete local vessel segmentation, which necessitates enhancing the segmentation of vessel boundaries. Furthermore, current methods are limited to handling 2D blood vessel fragmentation cases. Our proposed boundary attention module directly extracts boundary voxels from the network's segmentation result. Additionally, we have established an optimal connection model based on minimal surfaces to determine the connection order between blood vessels. Our method achieves state-of-the-art performance in 3D multi-class vascular segmentation tasks, as evidenced by the high values of Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC) and Normalized Surface Dice (NSD) metrics. Furthermore, our approach improves the Betti error, LR error, and BR error indicators of vessel richness and structural integrity by more than 10 effectively addresses vessel fragmentation and yields blood vessels with a more precise topological structure.
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