Abstrakt: |
We established a diagnostic method for cerebral white matter lesions using MRI images and examined the relationship between the MRI images and the medical checkup data. There were approximately 25 MRI images for each patient's head, from the top of the head to near the eyes. To order these images, we defined the unit of axial for convenience. We varied conditions, such as the location and extent of the images to be loaded, into a convolutional neural network model and verified the changes in discrimination performance on the test data. Co-occurrence network diagrams were also used to determine the relationship between the grade of cerebral white matter lesions and the biochemical test items, which were treated as categorical variables, the progression of cerebral white matter lesions, and patient health status. The convolutional neural network showed the highest discrimination performance when the images were loaded into the model with 80 pixels per side, axial from 9 to 15, along with FLAIR and T1-weighted images. The area under the curve for each grade was 0.9814 for grade 0, 0.9800 for grade 1, 0.9905 for grade 2, 0.9977 for grade 3, and 0.9998 for grade 4. In the co-occurrence network diagram, patients with no or mild cerebral white matter lesions, such as grade 0 and grade 1, had near normal blood pressure, whereas grade 2 patients were closer to (isolated) systolic hypertension. This indicates that patients with higher-grade cerebral white matter lesions tend to experience more severe hypertension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |