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Linking sequence restoration capability of shuffled coronary angiography to coronary artery disease diagnosis.
Summary: Doctors use X-ray videos of the heart, called coronary angiography, to check for heart disease. Usually, they just look at still pictures from these videos and ignore the moving sequence. But what if the order of the pictures matters? Researchers mixed up the frames of these videos and tested if putting them back in order could help spot heart disease. They built a smart computer program (AI) to do this automatically. The AI was highly accurate (about 80%) and super fast, taking less than 30 seconds to work! This shows that the moving sequence of heart videos holds hidden clues that can help doctors diagnose heart problems better and faster.
Tags
Coronary Artery Disease
Disease
Coronary Angiography