Evaluation of an Object Detection Algorithm for Shrapnel and Development of a Triage Tool to Determine Injury Severity

Emergency medicine in austere environments rely on ultrasound imaging as an essential diagnostic tool. Without extensive training, identifying abnormalities such as shrapnel embedded in tissue, is challenging. Medical professionals with appropriate expertise are limited in resource-constrained envir...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of imaging Vol. 8; no. 9; p. 252
Main Authors Snider, Eric J., Hernandez-Torres, Sofia I., Avital, Guy, Boice, Emily N.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 19.09.2022
MDPI
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Summary:Emergency medicine in austere environments rely on ultrasound imaging as an essential diagnostic tool. Without extensive training, identifying abnormalities such as shrapnel embedded in tissue, is challenging. Medical professionals with appropriate expertise are limited in resource-constrained environments. Incorporating artificial intelligence models to aid the interpretation can reduce the skill gap, enabling identification of shrapnel, and its proximity to important anatomical features for improved medical treatment. Here, we apply a deep learning object detection framework, YOLOv3, for shrapnel detection in various sizes and locations with respect to a neurovascular bundle. Ultrasound images were collected in a tissue phantom containing shrapnel, vein, artery, and nerve features. The YOLOv3 framework, classifies the object types and identifies the location. In the testing dataset, the model was successful at identifying each object class, with a mean Intersection over Union and average precision of 0.73 and 0.94, respectively. Furthermore, a triage tool was developed to quantify shrapnel distance from neurovascular features that could notify the end user when a proximity threshold is surpassed, and, thus, may warrant evacuation or surgical intervention. Overall, object detection models such as this will be vital to compensate for lack of expertise in ultrasound interpretation, increasing its availability for emergency and military medicine.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
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ISSN:2313-433X
2313-433X
DOI:10.3390/jimaging8090252