Analysis of the density and distribution of entropy in biomedical infrared imaging for Diabetes Mellitus Type II.
Rosalinda Ortiz-SosaEdgar Israel Fuentes-OliverCrescencio García-SegundoRaúl Serrano-LoyolaRebeca Solalinde-VargasPublished in: Biomedical physics & engineering express (2021)
We report a methodology to analyze data extracted from infrared images. These pictures show the lower limbs of a cohort of individuals belonging to, (1) voluntary controls and (2) patients diagnosed with diabetes mellitus type II. The analysis is presented in terms of Cross Entropy and temperature distributions; both using the associated thermal histograms. The temperature analysis is placed in terms of comparing the extreme values ofdS/dQ, for controls and patients. In this analysis for the frontal view, the values of specificity and sensitivity calculated were 77.77% and 91.66%, respectively. For the back view, the specificity and sensitivity obtained were 88.8% and 83.3%, respectively. Instead of that, the cross-entropy analysis is placed in the modality of self-referencing. In this part of the study we obtained the coefficient of asymmetry and thermal response (ATR). The values of specificity and sensitivity for the ATR quotient in both cases were 83.3%. The results of both studies have a significant correlation with glucose (p< 0.01) and HbA1c (p< 0.01). It means that both approaches have statistical correspondence. By means of the Mann-Whitney U test, for independent samples, we get that the characteristic parameters we analyze can be differentiated among the populations of interest with a significance ofp< 0.05. This suggests that both studies show consistency with the clinical diagnosis; exhibiting clear differences between control and patient groups.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- metabolic syndrome
- high resolution
- type diabetes
- magnetic resonance imaging
- peritoneal dialysis
- working memory
- oxidative stress
- mass spectrometry
- magnetic resonance
- case report
- dna damage
- electronic health record
- optical coherence tomography
- big data
- blood glucose
- genetic diversity