While cholecystitis is a critical public health problem, the conventional diagnostic methods for its detection are time consuming, expensive, and insufficiently sensitive. This study examined the possibility of using serum… Click to show full abstract
While cholecystitis is a critical public health problem, the conventional diagnostic methods for its detection are time consuming, expensive, and insufficiently sensitive. This study examined the possibility of using serum fluorescence spectroscopy and machine learning for the rapid and accurate identification of patients with cholecystitis. Significant differences were observed between the fluorescence spectral intensities of the serum of cholecystitis patients (nā=ā74) serum and those of healthy subjects (nā=ā71) at 455, 480, 485, 515, 625, and 690 nm. The ratios of characteristic fluorescence spectral peak intensities were first calculated, and principal component analysis (PCA)-linear discriminant analysis (LDA), and PCA-support vector machine (SVM) classification models were then constructed using the ratios as variables. Compared with the PCA-LDA model, the PCA-SVM model displayed better diagnostic performance in differentiating cholecystitis patients from healthy subjects, with an overall accuracy of 96.55%. This exploratory study showed that serum fluorescence spectroscopy combined with the PCA-SVM algorithm has significant potential for the development of a rapid cholecystitis screening method.
               
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