Extraction of nucleolus candidate zone in white blood cells of peripheral blood smear images using curvelet transform (Q428263): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 08:27, 5 July 2024

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Extraction of nucleolus candidate zone in white blood cells of peripheral blood smear images using curvelet transform
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    Extraction of nucleolus candidate zone in white blood cells of peripheral blood smear images using curvelet transform (English)
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    19 June 2012
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    Summary: The main part of each white blood cell (WBC) is its nucleus which contains chromosomes. Although white blood cells (WBCs) with giant nuclei are the main symptom of leukemia, they are not sufficient to prove this disease and other symptoms must be investigated. For example another important symptom of leukemia is the existence of nucleolus in the nucleus. The nucleus contains chromatin and a structure called the nucleolus. Chromatin is DNA in its active form while nucleolus is composed of protein and RNA, which are usually inactive. In this paper, to diagnose this symptom and in order to discriminate between nucleoli and chromatins, we employ a curvelet transform, which is a multiresolution transform for detecting 2\,D singularities in images. For this reason, at first nuclei are extracted by means of the K-means method, then the curvelet transform is applied on extracted nuclei and the coefficients are modified, and finally a reconstructed image is used to extract the candidate locations of chromatins and nucleoli. This method is applied on 100 microscopic images and succeeds with specificity of 80.2\% and sensitivity of 84.3\% to detect the nucleolus candidate zone. After nucleolus candidate zone detection, new features that can be used to classify atypical and blast cells such as gradient of saturation channel are extracted.
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