Artificial intelligence in stroke risk assessment and management via retinal imaging

被引:0
|
作者
Khalafi, Parsa [1 ]
Morsali, Soroush [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Hamidi, Sana [2 ,3 ]
Ashayeri, Hamidreza [2 ,4 ]
Sobhi, Navid [5 ]
Pedrammehr, Siamak [6 ,7 ]
Jafarizadeh, Ali [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tehran Med Sci, Sch Med, Tehran, Iran
[2] Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Student Res Comm, Tabriz, Iran
[3] Universal Sci Educ & Res Network USERN, Tabriz USERN Off, Tabriz, Iran
[4] Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Neurosci Res Ctr, Tabriz, Iran
[5] Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Nikookari Eye Ctr, Tabriz, Iran
[6] Tabriz Islamic Art Univ, Fac Design, Tabriz, Iran
[7] Deakin Univ, Inst Intelligent Syst Res & Innovat IISRI, Geelong, Vic, Australia
关键词
stroke; neurovascular disease; artificial intelligence; retinal images; fundus images; deep learning; machine learning; review; OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY; CHA(2)DS(2)-VASC SCORE; DIABETIC-RETINOPATHY; VESSEL SEGMENTATION; LAYER SEGMENTATION; IMAGES; PREDICTION; ANGIOGRAPHY; NETWORK; CLASSIFICATION;
D O I
10.3389/fncom.2025.1490603
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Retinal imaging, used for assessing stroke-related retinal changes, is a non-invasive and cost-effective method that can be enhanced by machine learning and deep learning algorithms, showing promise in early disease detection, severity grading, and prognostic evaluation in stroke patients. This review explores the role of artificial intelligence (AI) in stroke patient care, focusing on retinal imaging integration into clinical workflows. Retinal imaging has revealed several microvascular changes, including a decrease in the central retinal artery diameter and an increase in the central retinal vein diameter, both of which are associated with lacunar stroke and intracranial hemorrhage. Additionally, microvascular changes, such as arteriovenous nicking, increased vessel tortuosity, enhanced arteriolar light reflex, decreased retinal fractals, and thinning of retinal nerve fiber layer are also reported to be associated with higher stroke risk. AI models, such as Xception and EfficientNet, have demonstrated accuracy comparable to traditional stroke risk scoring systems in predicting stroke risk. For stroke diagnosis, models like Inception, ResNet, and VGG, alongside machine learning classifiers, have shown high efficacy in distinguishing stroke patients from healthy individuals using retinal imaging. Moreover, a random forest model effectively distinguished between ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke subtypes based on retinal features, showing superior predictive performance compared to traditional clinical characteristics. Additionally, a support vector machine model has achieved high classification accuracy in assessing pial collateral status. Despite this advancements, challenges such as the lack of standardized protocols for imaging modalities, hesitance in trusting AI-generated predictions, insufficient integration of retinal imaging data with electronic health records, the need for validation across diverse populations, and ethical and regulatory concerns persist. Future efforts must focus on validating AI models across diverse populations, ensuring algorithm transparency, and addressing ethical and regulatory issues to enable broader implementation. Overcoming these barriers will be essential for translating this technology into personalized stroke care and improving patient outcomes.
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页数:18
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