• Military medicine · Nov 2023

    Autonomous Multi-modality Burn Wound Characterization using Artificial Intelligence.

    • Maxwell J Jacobson, Mohamed El Masry, Daniela Chanci Arrubla, Maria Romeo Tricas, Surya C Gnyawali, Xinwei Zhang, Gayle Gordillo, Yexiang Xue, Chandan K Sen, and Juan Wachs.
    • Department of Computer Science, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
    • Mil Med. 2023 Nov 8; 188 (Suppl 6): 674681674-681.

    IntroductionBetween 5% and 20% of all combat-related casualties are attributed to burn wounds. A decrease in the mortality rate of burns by about 36% can be achieved with early treatment, but this is contingent upon accurate characterization of the burn. Precise burn injury classification is recognized as a crucial aspect of the medical artificial intelligence (AI) field. An autonomous AI system designed to analyze multiple characteristics of burns using modalities including ultrasound and RGB images is described.Materials And MethodsA two-part dataset is created for the training and validation of the AI: in vivo B-mode ultrasound scans collected from porcine subjects (10,085 frames), and RGB images manually collected from web sources (338 images). The framework in use leverages an explanation system to corroborate and integrate burn expert's knowledge, suggesting new features and ensuring the validity of the model. Through the utilization of this framework, it is discovered that B-mode ultrasound classifiers can be enhanced by supplying textural features. More specifically, it is confirmed that statistical texture features extracted from ultrasound frames can increase the accuracy of the burn depth classifier.ResultsThe system, with all included features selected using explainable AI, is capable of classifying burn depth with accuracy and F1 average above 80%. Additionally, the segmentation module has been found capable of segmenting with a mean global accuracy greater than 84%, and a mean intersection-over-union score over 0.74.ConclusionsThis work demonstrates the feasibility of accurate and automated burn characterization for AI and indicates that these systems can be improved with additional features when a human expert is combined with explainable AI. This is demonstrated on real data (human for segmentation and porcine for depth classification) and establishes the groundwork for further deep-learning thrusts in the area of burn analysis.© The Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2023. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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