Abstract:Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and microvascular leukoencephalopathy are two distinct neurological conditions, the first caused by focal autoimmune inflammation in the central nervous system, the second caused by chronic white matter damage from atherosclerotic microvascular disease. Both conditions lead to signal anomalies on Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery (FLAIR) magnetic resonance (MR) images, which can be distinguished by an expert neuroradiologist, but which can look very similar to the untrained eye as well as in the early stage of both diseases. In this paper, we attempt to train a 3-dimensional deep neural network to learn the specific features of both diseases in an unsupervised manner. For this manner, in a first step we train a generative neural network to create artificial MR images of both conditions with approximate explicit density, using a mixed dataset of multiple sclerosis, leukoencephalopathy and healthy patients containing in total 5404 volumes of 3096 patients. In a second step, we distinguish features between the different diseases in the latent space of this network, and use them to classify new data.