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      Searching for Pneumothorax in Half a Million Chest X-Ray Images

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          Abstract

          Pneumothorax, a collapsed or dropped lung, is a fatal condition typically detected on a chest X-ray by an experienced radiologist. Due to shortage of such experts, automated detection systems based on deep neural networks have been developed. Nevertheless, applying such systems in practice remains a challenge. These systems, mostly compute a single probability as output, may not be enough for diagnosis. On the contrary, content-based medical image retrieval (CBIR) systems, such as image search, can assist clinicians for diagnostic purposes by enabling them to compare the case they are examining with previous (already diagnosed) cases. However, there is a lack of study on such attempt. In this study, we explored the use of image search to classify pneumothorax among chest X-ray images. All chest X-ray images were first tagged with deep pretrained features, which were obtained from existing deep learning models. Given a query chest X-ray image, the majority voting of the top K retrieved images was then used as a classifier, in which similar cases in the archive of past cases are provided besides the probability output. In our experiments, 551,383 chest X-ray images were obtained from three large recently released public datasets. Using 10-fold cross-validation, it is shown that image search on deep pretrained features achieved promising results compared to those obtained by traditional classifiers trained on the same features. To the best of knowledge, it is the first study to demonstrate that deep pretrained features can be used for CBIR of pneumothorax in half a million chest X-ray images.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          30 July 2020
          Article
          2007.15429
          c3f6d1de-22f4-4327-840f-f2b56c86736d

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          AIME 2020 International Conference on AI in Medicine, USA
          eess.IV cs.CV

          Computer vision & Pattern recognition,Electrical engineering
          Computer vision & Pattern recognition, Electrical engineering

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