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1.
Neurocomputing (Amst) ; 285: 74-81, 2018 Apr 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29805200

ABSTRACT

Total variation (TV) minimization for the sparse-view x-ray computer tomography (CT) reconstruction has been widely explored to reduce radiation dose. However, due to the piecewise constant assumption for the TV model, the reconstructed images often suffer from over-smoothness on the image edges. To mitigate this drawback of TV minimization, we present a Mumford-Shah total variation (MSTV) minimization algorithm in this paper. The presented MSTV model is derived by integrating TV minimization and Mumford-Shah segmentation. Subsequently, a penalized weighted least-squares (PWLS) scheme with MSTV is developed for the sparse-view CT reconstruction. For simplicity, the proposed algorithm is named as 'PWLS-MSTV.' To evaluate the performance of the present PWLS-MSTV algorithm, both qualitative and quantitative studies were conducted by using a digital XCAT phantom and a physical phantom. Experimental results show that the present PWLS-MSTV algorithm has noticeable gains over the existing algorithms in terms of noise reduction, contrast-to-ratio measure and edge-preservation.

2.
J Xray Sci Technol ; 26(2): 311-330, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29562570

ABSTRACT

Dual energy computed tomography (DECT) can improve the capability of differentiating different materials compared with conventional CT. However, due to non-negligible radiation exposure to patients, dose reduction has recently become a critical concern in CT imaging field. In this work, to reduce noise at the same time maintain DECT images quality, we present an iterative reconstruction algorithm for low-dose DECT images where in the objective function of the algorithm consists of a data-fidelity term and a regularization term. The former term is based on alpha-divergence to describe the statistical distribution of the DE sinogram data. And the latter term is based on the redundant information to reflect the prior information of the desired DECT images. For simplicity, the presented algorithm is termed as "AlphaD-aviNLM". To minimize the associative objective function, a modified proximal forward-backward splitting algorithm is proposed. Digital phantom, physical phantom, and patient data were utilized to validate and evaluate the presented AlphaD-aviNLM algorithm. The experimental results characterize the performance of the presented AlphaD-aviNLM algorithm. Speficically, in the digital phantom study, the presented AlphaD-aviNLM algorithm performs better than the PWLS-TV, PWLS-aviNLM, and AlphaD-TV with more than 49%, 34%, and 40% gains for the RMSE metric, 1.3%, 0.4%, and 0.7% gains for the FSIM metric and 13%, 8%, and 11% gains for the PSNR metric. In the physical phantom study, the presented AlphaD-aviNLM algorithm performs better than the PWLS-TV, PWLS-aviNLM, and AlphaD-TV with more than 0.55%, 0.07%, and 0.16% gains for the FSIM metric.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Algorithms , Humans , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Models, Statistical , Phantoms, Imaging , Radiography, Thoracic
3.
J Xray Sci Technol ; 2017 Apr 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28387700

ABSTRACT

BCKGROUND: Accurate statistical model of the measured projection data is essential for computed tomography (CT) image reconstruction. The transmission data can be described by a compound Poisson distribution upon an electronic noise background. However, such a statistical distribution is numerically intractable for image reconstruction. OBJECTIVE: Although the sinogram data is easily manipulated, it lacks a statistical description for image reconstruction. To address this problem, we present an alpha-divergence constrained total generalized variation (AD-TGV) method for sparse-view x-ray CT image reconstruction. METHODS: The AD-TGV method is formulated as an optimization problem, which balances the alpha-divergence (AD) fidelity and total generalized variation (TGV) regularization in one framework. The alpha-divergence is used to measure the discrepancy between the measured and estimated projection data. The TGV regularization can effectively eliminate the staircase and patchy artifacts which is often observed in total variation (TV) regularization. A modified proximal forward-backward splitting algorithm was proposed to minimize the associated objective function. RESULTS: Qualitative and quantitative evaluations were carried out on both phantom and patient data. Compared with the original TV-based method, the evaluations clearly demonstrate that the AD-TGV method achieves higher accuracy and lower noise, while preserving structural details. CONCLUSIONS: The experimental results show that the presented AD-TGV method can achieve more gains over the AD-TV method in preserving structural details and suppressing image noise and undesired patchy artifacts. The authors can draw the conclusion that the presented AD-TGV method is potential for radiation dose reduction by lowering the milliampere-seconds (mAs) and/or reducing the number of projection views.

4.
Neurocomputing (Amst) ; 197: 143-160, 2016 Jul 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27440948

ABSTRACT

Cerebral perfusion x-ray computed tomography (PCT) is an important functional imaging modality for evaluating cerebrovascular diseases and has been widely used in clinics over the past decades. However, due to the protocol of PCT imaging with repeated dynamic sequential scans, the associative radiation dose unavoidably increases as compared with that used in conventional CT examinations. Minimizing the radiation exposure in PCT examination is a major task in the CT field. In this paper, considering the rich similarity redundancy information among enhanced sequential PCT images, we propose a low-dose PCT image restoration model by incorporating the low-rank and sparse matrix characteristic of sequential PCT images. Specifically, the sequential PCT images were first stacked into a matrix (i.e., low-rank matrix), and then a non-convex spectral norm/regularization and a spatio-temporal total variation norm/regularization were then built on the low-rank matrix to describe the low rank and sparsity of the sequential PCT images, respectively. Subsequently, an improved split Bregman method was adopted to minimize the associative objective function with a reasonable convergence rate. Both qualitative and quantitative studies were conducted using a digital phantom and clinical cerebral PCT datasets to evaluate the present method. Experimental results show that the presented method can achieve images with several noticeable advantages over the existing methods in terms of noise reduction and universal quality index. More importantly, the present method can produce more accurate kinetic enhanced details and diagnostic hemodynamic parameter maps.

5.
J Xray Sci Technol ; 24(5): 709-722, 2016 10 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27341627

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Dynamic positron emission tomography (PET) is a powerful tool that provides useful quantitative information on physiological and biochemical processes. However, the low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in short dynamic frames is a challenge. OBJECTIVE: To get high SNR in the dynamic PET and to achieve high-quality PET parametric image are the objective of this study. METHODS: Low-rank (LR) modeling and edge-preserving prior are incorporated in this study with a unified mathematical framework to improve the SNR of a dynamic PET image series. The proposed algorithm is designed to reduce noise in homogeneous areas while preserving the edges of regions of interest. RESULTS: The performance of the proposed method (LRH) is compared both visually and quantitatively by using the classic Gaussian filter and an LR expression filter on a digital brain phantom and in vivo rat study. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed filter can achieve superior visual and quantitative performance without sacrificing spatial resolution. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed LRH is considerably effective and exhibits great potential in processing dynamic PET data with high noise levels.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Positron-Emission Tomography/methods , Algorithms , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Models, Biological , Phantoms, Imaging
6.
J Xray Sci Technol ; 24(6): 837-853, 2016 11 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27612048

ABSTRACT

Dynamic cerebral perfusion x-ray computed tomography (PCT) imaging has been advocated to quantitatively and qualitatively assess hemodynamic parameters in the diagnosis of acute stroke or chronic cerebrovascular diseases. However, the associated radiation dose is a significant concern to patients due to its dynamic scan protocol. To address this issue, in this paper we propose an image restoration method by utilizing coupled dictionary learning (CDL) scheme to yield clinically acceptable PCT images with low-dose data acquisition. Specifically, in the present CDL scheme, the 2D background information from the average of the baseline time frames of low-dose unenhanced CT images and the 3D enhancement information from normal-dose sequential cerebral PCT images are exploited to train the dictionary atoms respectively. After getting the two trained dictionaries, we couple them to represent the desired PCT images as spatio-temporal prior in objective function construction. Finally, the low-dose dynamic cerebral PCT images are restored by using a general DL image processing. To get a robust solution, the objective function is solved by using a modified dictionary learning based image restoration algorithm. The experimental results on clinical data show that the present method can yield more accurate kinetic enhanced details and diagnostic hemodynamic parameter maps than the state-of-the-art methods.


Subject(s)
Cerebrovascular Circulation , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Perfusion Imaging/methods , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Algorithms , Humans , Machine Learning
7.
IEEE Trans Nucl Sci ; 62(5): 2226-2233, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26543245

ABSTRACT

Low-dose X-ray computed tomography (CT) simulation from high-dose scan is required in optimizing radiation dose to patients. In this study, we propose a simple low-dose CT simulation strategy in sinogram domain using the raw data from high-dose scan. Specially, a relationship between the incident fluxes of low- and high- dose scans is first determined according to the repeated projection measurements and analysis. Second, the incident flux level of the simulated low-dose scan is generated by properly scaling the incident flux level of high-dose scan via the determined relationship in the first step. Third, the low-dose CT transmission data by energy integrating detection is simulated by adding a statistically independent Poisson noise distribution plus a statistically independent Gaussian noise distribution. Finally, a filtered back-projection (FBP) algorithm is implemented to reconstruct the resultant low-dose CT images. The present low-dose simulation strategy is verified on the simulations and real scans by comparing it with the existing low-dose CT simulation tool. Experimental results demonstrated that the present low-dose CT simulation strategy can generate accurate low-dose CT sinogram data from high-dose scan in terms of qualitative and quantitative measurements.

8.
J Xray Sci Technol ; 23(3): 331-48, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26410467

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The traditional Bayesian priors for maximum a posteriori (MAP) reconstruction methods usually incorporate local neighborhood interactions that penalize large deviations in parameter estimates for adjacent pixels; therefore, only local pixel differences are utilized. This limits their abilities of penalizing the image roughness. OBJECTIVE: To achieve high-quality PET image reconstruction, this study investigates a MAP reconstruction strategy by incorporating a nonlocal means induced (NLMi) prior (NLMi-MAP) which enables utilizing global similarity information of image. METHODS: The present NLMi prior approximates the derivative of Gibbs energy function by an NLM filtering process. Specially, the NLMi prior is obtained by subtracting the current image estimation from its NLM filtered version and feeding the residual error back to the reconstruction filter to yield the new image estimation. RESULTS: We tested the present NLMi-MAP method with simulated and real PET datasets. Comparison studies with conventional filtered backprojection (FBP) and a few iterative reconstruction methods clearly demonstrate that the present NLMi-MAP method performs better in lowering noise, preserving image edge and in higher signal to noise ratio (SNR). CONCLUSIONS: Extensive experimental results show that the NLMi-MAP method outperforms the existing methods in terms of cross profile, noise reduction, SNR, root mean square error (RMSE) and correlation coefficient (CORR).


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Positron-Emission Tomography/methods , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Phantoms, Imaging , Positron-Emission Tomography/instrumentation
9.
Opt Express ; 22(12): 15190-210, 2014 Jun 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24977611

ABSTRACT

To realize low-dose imaging in X-ray computed tomography (CT) examination, lowering milliampere-seconds (low-mAs) or reducing the required number of projection views (sparse-view) per rotation around the body has been widely studied as an easy and effective approach. In this study, we are focusing on low-dose CT image reconstruction from the sinograms acquired with a combined low-mAs and sparse-view protocol and propose a two-step image reconstruction strategy. Specifically, to suppress significant statistical noise in the noisy and insufficient sinograms, an adaptive sinogram restoration (ASR) method is first proposed with consideration of the statistical property of sinogram data, and then to further acquire a high-quality image, a total variation based projection onto convex sets (TV-POCS) method is adopted with a slight modification. For simplicity, the present reconstruction strategy was termed as "ASR-TV-POCS." To evaluate the present ASR-TV-POCS method, both qualitative and quantitative studies were performed on a physical phantom. Experimental results have demonstrated that the present ASR-TV-POCS method can achieve promising gains over other existing methods in terms of the noise reduction, contrast-to-noise ratio, and edge detail preservation.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Phantoms, Imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Radiation Dosage
10.
Phys Med Biol ; 69(8)2024 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38422540

ABSTRACT

Background.Concern has been expressed regarding the risk of carcinogenesis from medical computed tomography (CT) radiation. Lowering radiation in CT without appropriate modifications often leads to severe noise-induced artifacts in the images. The utilization of deep learning (DL) techniques has achieved promising reconstruction performance in low-dose CT (LDCT) imaging. However, most DL-based algorithms require the pre-collection of a large set of image pairs (low-dose/standard-dose) and the training of networks in an end-to-end supervised manner. Meanwhile, securing such a large volume of paired, well-registered training data in clinical practice is challenging. Moreover, these algorithms often overlook the potential to utilize the abundant information in a large collection of LDCT-only images/sinograms.Methods.In this paper, we introduce a semi-supervised iterative adaptive network (SIA-Net) for LDCT imaging, utilizing both labeled and unlabeled sinograms in a cohesive network framework, integrating supervised and unsupervised learning processes. Specifically, the supervised process captures critical features (i.e. noise distribution and tissue characteristics) latent in the paired sinograms, while the unsupervised process effectively learns these features in the unlabeled low-dose sinograms, employing a conventional weighted least-squares model with a regularization term. Furthermore, the SIA-Net method is designed to adaptively transfer the learned feature distribution from the supervised to the unsupervised process, thereby obtaining a high-fidelity sinogram through iterative adaptive learning. Finally, high-quality CT images can be reconstructed from the refined sinogram using the filtered back-projection algorithm.Results.Experimental results on two clinical datasets indicate that the proposed SIA-Net method achieves competitive performance in terms of noise reduction and structure preservation in LDCT imaging, when compared to traditional supervised learning methods.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Radiation Dosage , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Artifacts
11.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 28(6): 3613-3625, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38478459

ABSTRACT

Deep learning (DL) algorithms have achieved unprecedented success in low-dose CT (LDCT) imaging and are expected to be a new generation of CT reconstruction technology. However, most DL-based denoising models often lack the ability to generalize to unseen dose data. Moreover, most simulation tools for LDCT typically operate on proprietary projection data, which is generally not accessible without an established collaboration with CT manufacturers. To alleviate these issues, in this work, we propose a dose-agnostic dual-task transfer network, termed DDT-Net, for simultaneous LDCT denoising and simulation. Concretely, the dual-task learning module is constructed to integrate the LDCT denoising and simulation tasks into a unified optimization framework by learning the joint distribution of LDCT and NDCT data. We approximate the joint distribution of continuous dose level data by training DDT-Net with discrete dose data, which can be generalized to denoising and simulation of unseen dose data. In particular, the mixed-dose training strategy adopted by DDT-Net can promote the denoising performance of lower-dose data. The paired dataset simulated by DDT-Net can be used for data augmentation to further restore the tissue texture of LDCT images. Experimental results on synthetic data and clinical data show that the proposed DDT-Net outperforms competing methods in terms of denoising and generalization performance at unseen dose data, and it also provides a simulation tool that can quickly simulate realistic LDCT images at arbitrary dose levels.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Deep Learning , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Humans , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Computer Simulation , Radiation Dosage , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
12.
Phys Med Biol ; 69(14)2024 Jul 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38588680

ABSTRACT

Objective.Metal artifacts in computed tomography (CT) images hinder diagnosis and treatment significantly. Specifically, dental cone-beam computed tomography (Dental CBCT) images are seriously contaminated by metal artifacts due to the widespread use of low tube voltages and the presence of various high-attenuation materials in dental structures. Existing supervised metal artifact reduction (MAR) methods mainly learn the mapping of artifact-affected images to clean images, while ignoring the modeling of the metal artifact generation process. Therefore, we propose the bidirectional artifact representations learning framework to adaptively encode metal artifacts caused by various dental implants and model the generation and elimination of metal artifacts, thereby improving MAR performance.Approach.Specifically, we introduce an efficient artifact encoder to extract multi-scale representations of metal artifacts from artifact-affected images. These extracted metal artifact representations are then bidirectionally embedded into both the metal artifact generator and the metal artifact eliminator, which can simultaneously improve the performance of artifact removal and artifact generation. The artifact eliminator learns artifact removal in a supervised manner, while the artifact generator learns artifact generation in an adversarial manner. To further improve the performance of the bidirectional task networks, we propose artifact consistency loss to align the consistency of images generated by the eliminator and the generator with or without embedding artifact representations.Main results.To validate the effectiveness of our algorithm, experiments are conducted on simulated and clinical datasets containing various dental metal morphologies. Quantitative metrics are calculated to evaluate the results of the simulation tests, which demonstrate b-MAR improvements of >1.4131 dB in PSNR, >0.3473 HU decrements in RMSE, and >0.0025 promotion in structural similarity index measurement over the current state-of-the-art MAR methods. All results indicate that the proposed b-MAR method can remove artifacts caused by various metal morphologies and restore the structural integrity of dental tissues effectively.Significance.The proposed b-MAR method strengthens the joint learning of the artifact removal process and the artifact generation process by bidirectionally embedding artifact representations, thereby improving the model's artifact removal performance. Compared with other comparison methods, b-MAR can robustly and effectively correct metal artifacts in dental CBCT images caused by different dental metals.


Subject(s)
Artifacts , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Metals , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Humans
13.
Sheng Wu Yi Xue Gong Cheng Xue Za Zhi ; 30(3): 455-9, 2013 Jun.
Article in Zh | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23865299

ABSTRACT

Maximum a Posteriori (MAP) method has been widely applied to the ill-posed problem of image reconstruction. The choice of prior is the crucial point on MAP methods. However, the most conventional priors will lead to a blurring of the whole image or cause ladder-like artifacts. We therefore proposed a Tsallis entropy-based prior for positron emission tomography (PET) iterative reconstruction in MAP framework. The method uses a Tsallis entropy-based prior to eliminate the uncertainty between prior information and the estimated images. We tested this method in the phantom image, compared it with the traditional prior methods. the results showed that the proposed algorithm could suppress noise and obtain better reconstructed image quality.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Artifacts , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Positron-Emission Tomography/methods , Entropy , Phantoms, Imaging
14.
Phys Med Biol ; 68(6)2023 03 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36808913

ABSTRACT

Objective.Metal artifacts in the computed tomography (CT) imaging are unavoidably adverse to the clinical diagnosis and treatment outcomes. Most metal artifact reduction (MAR) methods easily result in the over-smoothing problem and loss of structure details near the metal implants, especially for these metal implants with irregular elongated shapes. To address this problem, we present the physics-informed sinogram completion (PISC) method for MAR in CT imaging, to reduce metal artifacts and recover more structural textures.Approach.Specifically, the original uncorrected sinogram is firstly completed by the normalized linear interpolation algorithm to reduce metal artifacts. Simultaneously, the uncorrected sinogram is also corrected based on the beam-hardening correction physical model, to recover the latent structure information in metal trajectory region by leveraging the attenuation characteristics of different materials. Both corrected sinograms are fused with the pixel-wise adaptive weights, which are manually designed according to the shape and material information of metal implants. To furtherly reduce artifacts and improve the CT image quality, a post-processing frequency split algorithm is adopted to yield the final corrected CT image after reconstructing the fused sinogram.Main results.We qualitatively and quantitatively evaluated the presented PISC method on two simulated datasets and three real datasets. All results demonstrate that the presented PISC method can effectively correct the metal implants with various shapes and materials, in terms of artifact suppression and structure preservation.Significance.We proposed a sinogram-domain MAR method to compensate for the over-smoothing problem existing in most MAR methods by taking advantage of the physical prior knowledge, which has the potential to improve the performance of the deep learning based MAR approaches.


Subject(s)
Artifacts , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Algorithms , Metals , Physics , Phantoms, Imaging , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
15.
Phys Med Biol ; 67(11)2022 05 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35523153

ABSTRACT

Objective.The radiation dose of cerebral perfusion computed tomography (CPCT) imaging can be reduced by lowering the milliampere-second or kilovoltage peak. However, dose reduction can decrease image quality due to excessive x-ray quanta fluctuation and reduced detector signal relative to system electronic noise, thereby influencing the accuracy of hemodynamic parameters for patients with acute stroke. Existing low-dose CPCT denoising methods, which mainly focus on specific temporal and spatial prior knowledge in low-dose CPCT images, not take the noise distribution characteristics of low-dose CPCT images into consideration. In practice, the noise of low-dose CPCT images can be much more complicated. This study first investigates the noise properties in low-dose CPCT images and proposes a perfusion deconvolution model based on the noise properties.Approach.To characterize the noise distribution in CPCT images properly, we analyze noise properties in low-dose CPCT images and find that the intra-frame noise distribution may vary in the different areas and the inter-frame noise also may vary in low-dose CPCT images. Thus, we attempt the first-ever effort to model CPCT noise with a non-independent and identical distribution (i.i.d.) mixture-of-Gaussians (MoG) model for noise assumption. Furthermore, we integrate the noise modeling strategy into a perfusion deconvolution model and present a novel perfusion deconvolution method by using self-relative structural similarity information and MoG model (named as SR-MoG) to estimate the hemodynamic parameters accurately. In the presented SR-MoG method, the self-relative structural similarity information is obtained from preprocessed low-dose CPCT images.Main results.The results show that the presented SR-MoG method can achieve promising gains over the existing deconvolution approaches. In particular, the average root-mean-square error (RMSE) of cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral blood volume, and mean transit time was improved by 40.3%, 69.1%, and 40.8% in the digital phantom study, and the average RMSE of CBF can be improved by 81.0% in the clinical data study, compared with tensor total variation regularization deconvolution method.Significance.The presented SR-MoG method can estimate high-accuracy hemodynamic parameters andachieve promising gains over the existing deconvolution approaches.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Hemodynamics , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Perfusion , Phantoms, Imaging , Signal-To-Noise Ratio , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods
16.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 41(12): 3849-3861, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35939459

ABSTRACT

Deep learning (DL)-based methods show great potential in computed tomography (CT) imaging field. The DL-based reconstruction methods are usually evaluated on the training and testing datasets which are obtained from the same distribution, i.e., the same CT scan protocol (i.e., the region setting, kVp, mAs, etc.). In this work, we focus on analyzing the robustness of the DL-based methods against protocol-specific distribution shifts (i.e., the training and testing datasets are from different region settings, different kVp settings, or different mAs settings, respectively). The results show that the DL-based reconstruction methods are sensitive to the protocol-specific perturbations which can be attributed to the noise distribution shift between the training and testing datasets. Based on these findings, we presented a low-dose CT reconstruction method using an unsupervised strategy with the consideration of noise distribution to address the issue of protocol-specific perturbations. Specifically, unpaired sinogram data is enrolled into the network training, which represents unique information for specific imaging protocol, and a Gaussian mixture model (GMM) is introduced to characterize the noise distribution in CT images. It can be termed as GMM based unsupervised CT reconstruction network (GMM-unNet) method. Moreover, an expectation-maximization algorithm is designed to optimize the presented GMM-unNet method. Extensive experiments are performed on three datasets from different scan protocols, which demonstrate that the presented GMM-unNet method outperforms the competing methods both qualitatively and quantitatively.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Radiation Dosage , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Normal Distribution , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods
17.
Phys Med Biol ; 67(18)2022 09 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35926503

ABSTRACT

Computed tomography perfusion (CTP) is a functional imaging that allows for providing capillary-level hemodynamics information of the desired tissue in clinics. In this paper, we aim to offer insight into CTP imaging which covers the basics and current state of CTP imaging, then summarize the technical applications in the CTP imaging as well as the future technological potential. At first, we focus on the fundamentals of CTP imaging including systematically summarized CTP image acquisition and hemodynamic parameter map estimation techniques. A short assessment is presented to outline the clinical applications with CTP imaging, and then a review of radiation dose effect of the CTP imaging on the different applications is presented. We present a categorized methodology review on known and potential solvable challenges of radiation dose reduction in CTP imaging. To evaluate the quality of CTP images, we list various standardized performance metrics. Moreover, we present a review on the determination of infarct and penumbra. Finally, we reveal the popularity and future trend of CTP imaging.


Subject(s)
Perfusion Imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Perfusion , Perfusion Imaging/methods , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods
18.
Phys Med Biol ; 67(24)2022 12 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36351294

ABSTRACT

Objective.Deep neural network (DNN) based methods have shown promising performances for low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) imaging. However, most of the DNN-based methods are trained on simulated labeled datasets, and the low-dose simulation algorithms are usually designed based on simple statistical models which deviate from the real clinical scenarios, which could lead to issues of overfitting, instability and poor robustness. To address these issues, in this work, we present a structure-preserved meta-learning uniting network (shorten as 'SMU-Net') to suppress noise-induced artifacts and preserve structure details in the unlabeled LDCT imaging task in real scenarios.Approach.Specifically, the presented SMU-Net contains two networks, i.e., teacher network and student network. The teacher network is trained on simulated labeled dataset and then helps the student network train with the unlabeled LDCT images via the meta-learning strategy. The student network is trained on real LDCT dataset with the pseudo-labels generated by the teacher network. Moreover, the student network adopts the Co-teaching strategy to improve the robustness of the presented SMU-Net.Main results.We validate the proposed SMU-Net method on three public datasets and one real low-dose dataset. The visual image results indicate that the proposed SMU-Net has superior performance on reducing noise-induced artifacts and preserving structure details. And the quantitative results exhibit that the presented SMU-Net method generally obtains the highest signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), the highest structural similarity index measurement (SSIM), and the lowest root-mean-square error (RMSE) values or the lowest natural image quality evaluator (NIQE) scores.Significance.We propose a meta learning strategy to obtain high-quality CT images in the LDCT imaging task, which is designed to take advantage of unlabeled CT images to promote the reconstruction performance in the LDCT environments.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Signal-To-Noise Ratio , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Neural Networks, Computer , Algorithms
19.
Phys Med Biol ; 66(11)2021 05 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33910178

ABSTRACT

Background. Computed tomography perfusion (CTP) imaging plays a critical role in the acute stroke syndrome assessment due to its widespread availability, speed of image acquisition, and relatively low cost. However, due to its repeated scanning protocol, CTP imaging involves a substantial radiation dose, which might increase potential cancer risks.Methods. In this work, we present a novel deep learning model called non-local perfusion texture learning network (NPTN) for high-quality CTP imaging at low-dose cases. Specifically, considering abundant similarities in the CTP images, i.e. latent self-similarities within the non-local region in the CTP images, we firstly search the most similar pixels from the adjacent frames within a fixed search window to obtain the non-local similarities and to construct non-local textures vector. Then, both the low-dose frame and these non-local textures from adjacent frames are fed into a convolution neural network to predict high-quality CTP images, which can help better characterize the structure details and contrast variants in the targeted CTP image rather than simply utilizing the targeted frame itself. The residual learning strategy and batch normalization are utilized to boost the performance of the convolution neural network. In the experiment, the CTP images of 31 patients with suspected stroke disease are collected to demonstrate the performance of the presented NPTN method.Results. The results show the presented NPTN method obtains superior performance compared with the competing methods. From numerical value, at all dose levels, the presented NPTN method has achieved around 3.0 dB improvement of average PSNR, an increase of around 1.4% of average SSIM, and a decrease of around 4.8% of average RMSE in the low-dose CTP reconstruction task, and also has achieved an increase of around 3.4% of average SSIM and a decrease of around 61.1% of average RMSE in the cerebral blood flow (CBF) estimation task.Conclusions. The presented NPTN method can obtain high-quality CTP images and estimate high-accuracy CBF map by characterizing more structure details and contrast variants in the CTP image and outperform the competing methods at low-dose cases.


Subject(s)
Stroke , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Humans , Perfusion , Perfusion Imaging , Stroke/diagnostic imaging
20.
Phys Med Biol ; 66(14)2021 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34181588

ABSTRACT

Dynamic CT myocardial perfusion imaging (DCT-MPI) is a reliable examination tool for the assessment of myocardium and vascular, while its special scan protocol may result in excessive radiation exposure to patients and inevitable inter-frame motion. Lowering the tube current is a simple way to reduce radiation exposure. However, low mAs will certainly cause severe image noise, thus may further impact the accuracy of functional hemodynamic parameters, which are used for the assessment of blood supply. In this work, we present a novel scheme applying motion compensation and local low rank regularization (MC-LLR) for obtaining high quality motion compensated DCT-MPI images. Specifically, motion compensation by using robust data decomposition registration (RDDR) was introduced. Robust principal component analysis coupled with optical flow-based registration algorithm were used in RDDR. Then, the local low rank constraint on the motion compensated time series images was applied for the DCT-MPI reconstruction. One healthy mini pig and two patient datasets were used to evaluate the proposed MC-LLR algorithm. Results show that the present method achieved satisfactory image quality with higher CNRs, smaller rRMSEs, and more accurate hemodynamic parameter maps.


Subject(s)
Myocardial Perfusion Imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Algorithms , Animals , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Myocardium , Perfusion , Phantoms, Imaging , Swine , Swine, Miniature
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