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Bayesian Statistical Analysis for Bacterial Detection in Pulmonary Endomicroscopic Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging.

Pneumonia, a respiratory disease often caused by bacterial infection in the distal lung, requires rapid and accurate identification, especially in settings such as critical care. Initiating or de-escalating antimicrobials should ideally be guided by the quantification of pathogenic bacteria for effective treatment. Optical endomicroscopy is an emerging technology with the potential to expedite bacterial detection in the distal lung by enabling in vivo and in situ optical tissue characterisation. With advancements in detector technology, Optical endomicroscopy can utilize fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) to help detect events that were previously challenging or impossible to identify using fluorescence intensity imaging. In this paper, we propose an iterative Bayesian approach for bacterial detection in FLIM. We model the FLIM image as a linear combination of background intensity, Gaussian noise, and additive outliers (labelled bacteria). While previous bacteria detection methods model anomalous pixels as bacteria, here the FLIM outliers are modelled as circularly symmetric Gaussian-shaped objects, based on their discrete shape observed through visual analysis and the physical nature of the imaging modality. A Hierarchical Bayesian model is used to solve the bacterial detection problem where prior distributions are assigned to unknown parameters. A Metropolis-Hastings within Gibbs sampler draws samples from the posterior distribution. The proposed method's detection performance is initially measured using synthetic images, and shows significant improvement over existing approaches. Further analysis is conducted on real Optical endomicroscopy FLIM images annotated by trained personnel. The experiments show the proposed approach outperforms existing methods by a margin of +16.85% (F1 ) for detection accuracy.

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