Description
Antibiotic resistance is a very important issue that threatens mankind. As bacteria
are becoming resistant to multiple antibiotics, many common antibiotics will soon
become ineective. The ineciency of current methods for diagnostics is an important
cause of antibiotic resistance, since due to their relative slowness, treatment plans
are often based on physician's experience rather than on test results, having a high
chance of being inaccurate or not optimal. This leads to a need of faster, pointof-
care (POC) methods, which can provide results in a few hours. Motivated by
recent advances on computer vision methods, three projects have been developed
for bacteria identication and antibiotic susceptibility tests (AST), with the goal of
speeding up the diagnostics process. The rst two projects focus on obtaining features
from optical microscopy such as bacteria shape and motion patterns to distinguish
active and inactive cells. The results show their potential as novel methods for AST,
being able to obtain results within a window of 30 min to 3 hours, a much faster
time frame than the gold standard approach based on cell culture, which takes at
least half a day to be completed. The last project focus on the identication task,
combining large volume light scattering microscopy (LVM) and deep learning to
distinguish bacteria from urine particles. The developed setup is suitable for pointof-
care applications, as a large volume can be viewed at a time, avoiding the need
for cell culturing or enrichment. This is a signicant gain compared to cell culturing
methods. The accuracy performance of the deep learning system is higher than chance
and outperforms a traditional machine learning system by up to 20%.
are becoming resistant to multiple antibiotics, many common antibiotics will soon
become ineective. The ineciency of current methods for diagnostics is an important
cause of antibiotic resistance, since due to their relative slowness, treatment plans
are often based on physician's experience rather than on test results, having a high
chance of being inaccurate or not optimal. This leads to a need of faster, pointof-
care (POC) methods, which can provide results in a few hours. Motivated by
recent advances on computer vision methods, three projects have been developed
for bacteria identication and antibiotic susceptibility tests (AST), with the goal of
speeding up the diagnostics process. The rst two projects focus on obtaining features
from optical microscopy such as bacteria shape and motion patterns to distinguish
active and inactive cells. The results show their potential as novel methods for AST,
being able to obtain results within a window of 30 min to 3 hours, a much faster
time frame than the gold standard approach based on cell culture, which takes at
least half a day to be completed. The last project focus on the identication task,
combining large volume light scattering microscopy (LVM) and deep learning to
distinguish bacteria from urine particles. The developed setup is suitable for pointof-
care applications, as a large volume can be viewed at a time, avoiding the need
for cell culturing or enrichment. This is a signicant gain compared to cell culturing
methods. The accuracy performance of the deep learning system is higher than chance
and outperforms a traditional machine learning system by up to 20%.
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Details
Title
- Computer Vision Methods for Urinary Tract Infection Diagnostics
Contributors
- Iriya, Rafael (Author)
- Turaga, Pavan (Thesis advisor)
- Wang, Shaopeng (Committee member)
- Grys, Thomas (Committee member)
- Zhang, Yanchao (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2020
Subjects
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Note
- Doctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 2020