Automatic computer vision-based detection and quantitative analysis of indicative parameters for grading of diabetic retinopathy (original) (raw)

Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is one of the complications of diabetes affecting the eyes. If not treated at an early stage, then it can cause permanent blindness. The present work proposes a method for automatic detection of pathologies that are indicative parameters for DR and use them strategically in a framework to grade the severity of the disease. The bright lesions are highlighted using a normalization process followed by anisotropic diffusion and intensity threshold for detection of lesions which makes the algorithm robust to correctly reject false positives. SVM-based classifier is used to reject false positives using 10 distinct feature types. Red lesions are accurately detected from a shade-corrected green channel image, followed by morphological flood filling and regional minima operations. The rejection of false positives using geometrical features makes the system less complex and computationally efficient. A comprehensive quantitative analysis to grade the severity of the disease has resulted in an average sensitivity of 92.85 and 86.03% on DIARETDB1 and MESSIDOR databases, respectively.