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1.
Eur Radiol ; 25(6): 1742-51, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25599933

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess visualization tasks using cone-beam CT (CBCT) compared to multi-detector CT (MDCT) for musculoskeletal extremity imaging. METHODS: Ten cadaveric hands and ten knees were examined using a dedicated CBCT prototype and a clinical multi-detector CT using nominal protocols (80 kVp-108mAs for CBCT; 120 kVp- 300 mAs for MDCT). Soft tissue and bone visualization tasks were assessed by four radiologists using five-point satisfaction (for CBCT and MDCT individually) and five-point preference (side-by-side CBCT versus MDCT image quality comparison) rating tests. Ratings were analyzed using Kruskal-Wallis and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests, and observer agreement was assessed using the Kappa-statistic. RESULTS: Knee CBCT images were rated "excellent" or "good" (median scores 5 and 4) for "bone" and "soft tissue" visualization tasks. Hand CBCT images were rated "excellent" or "adequate" (median scores 5 and 3) for "bone" and "soft tissue" visualization tasks. Preference tests rated CBCT equivalent or superior to MDCT for bone visualization and favoured the MDCT for soft tissue visualization tasks. Intraobserver agreement for CBCT satisfaction tests was fair to almost perfect (κ ~ 0.26-0.92), and interobserver agreement was fair to moderate (κ ~ 0.27-0.54). CONCLUSION: CBCT provided excellent image quality for bone visualization and adequate image quality for soft tissue visualization tasks. KEY POINTS: • CBCT provided adequate image quality for diagnostic tasks in extremity imaging. • CBCT images were "excellent" for "bone" and "good/adequate" for "soft tissue" visualization tasks. • CBCT image quality was equivalent/superior to MDCT for bone visualization tasks.


Subject(s)
Connective Tissue/diagnostic imaging , Musculoskeletal System/diagnostic imaging , Adipose Tissue/diagnostic imaging , Attitude of Health Personnel , Bone and Bones/diagnostic imaging , Cartilage, Articular/diagnostic imaging , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography/standards , Consumer Behavior , Hand , Humans , Knee Joint , Ligaments/diagnostic imaging , Multidetector Computed Tomography/standards , Muscle, Skeletal/diagnostic imaging , Observer Variation , Phantoms, Imaging , Radiology
2.
Med Phys ; 47(6): 2392-2407, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32145076

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Our aim was to develop a high-quality, mobile cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) scanner for point-of-care detection and monitoring of low-contrast, soft-tissue abnormalities in the head/brain, such as acute intracranial hemorrhage (ICH). This work presents an integrated framework of hardware and algorithmic advances for improving soft-tissue contrast resolution and evaluation of its technical performance with human subjects. METHODS: Four configurations of a CBCT scanner prototype were designed and implemented to investigate key aspects of hardware (including system geometry, antiscatter grid, bowtie filter) and technique protocols. An integrated software pipeline (c.f., a serial cascade of algorithms) was developed for artifact correction (image lag, glare, beam hardening and x-ray scatter), motion compensation, and three-dimensional image (3D) reconstruction [penalized weighted least squares (PWLS), with a hardware-specific statistical noise model]. The PWLS method was extended in this work to accommodate multiple, independently moving regions with different resolution (to address both motion compensation and image truncation). Imaging performance was evaluated quantitatively and qualitatively with 41 human subjects in the neurosciences critical care unit (NCCU) at our institution. RESULTS: The progression of four scanner configurations exhibited systematic improvement in the quality of raw data by variations in system geometry (source-detector distance), antiscatter grid, and bowtie filter. Quantitative assessment of CBCT images in 41 subjects demonstrated: ~70% reduction in image nonuniformity with artifact correction methods (lag, glare, beam hardening, and scatter); ~40% reduction in motion-induced streak artifacts via the multi-motion compensation method; and ~15% improvement in soft-tissue contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) for PWLS compared to filtered backprojection (FBP) at matched resolution. Each of these components was important to improve contrast resolution for point-of-care cranial imaging. CONCLUSIONS: This work presents the first application of a high-quality, point-of-care CBCT system for imaging of the head/ brain in a neurological critical care setting. Hardware configuration iterations and an integrated software pipeline for artifacts correction and PWLS reconstruction mitigated artifacts and noise to achieve image quality that could be valuable for point-of-care detection and monitoring of a variety of intracranial abnormalities, including ICH and hydrocephalus.


Subject(s)
Cone-Beam Computed Tomography , Head , Algorithms , Artifacts , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Head/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Phantoms, Imaging
3.
Phys Med Biol ; 63(24): 245018, 2018 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30524041

ABSTRACT

Cone-beam CT (CBCT) systems commonly incorporate a flat-panel detector (FPD) with multiple-gain readout capability to reduce electronic noise and extend dynamic range. In this work, we report a penalized weighted least-squares (PWLS) method for CBCT image reconstruction with a system model that includes the electronic noise characteristics of FPDs, including systems with dynamic-gain or dual-gain (DG) readout in which the electronic noise is spatially varying. Statistical weights in PWLS were modified to account for the contribution of the electronic noise (algorithm denoted [Formula: see text]), and the method was combined with a certainty-based approach that improves the homogeneity of spatial resolution (algorithm denoted [Formula: see text]). The methods were tested in phantom studies designed to stress DG readout characteristics and translated to a clinical study for CBCT of patients with head traumas. The [Formula: see text] method demonstrated superior noise-resolution tradeoffs compared to filtered back-projection (FBP) and conventional PWLS. For example, with spatial resolution (edge-spread function width) matched at 0.65 mm, [Formula: see text] reduced variance by 28%-39% and 15%-25% compared to FBP and PWLS, respectively. The [Formula: see text] method achieved more homogeneous spatial resolution than [Formula: see text] while maintaining similar variance reduction. These findings were confirmed in clinical studies, which showed ~20% variance reduction in peripheral regions of the brain, potentially improving visual image quality in detection of epidural and/or subdural intracranial hemorrhage. The results are consistent with the general notion that incorporating a more accurate system model improves performance in optimization-based statistical CBCT reconstruction-in this case, a more accurate model for (spatially varying) electronic noise to improve detectability of low-contrast lesions.


Subject(s)
Cone-Beam Computed Tomography , Craniocerebral Trauma/diagnostic imaging , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Phantoms, Imaging , Signal-To-Noise Ratio , Algorithms , Artifacts , Electronics , Humans , Least-Squares Analysis , Models, Biological , Models, Statistical , Reproducibility of Results
4.
Phys Med Biol ; 63(11): 115004, 2018 05 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29722296

ABSTRACT

Timely evaluation of neurovasculature via CT angiography (CTA) is critical to the detection of pathology such as ischemic stroke. Cone-beam CTA (CBCT-A) systems provide potential advantages in the timely use at the point-of-care, although challenges of a relatively slow gantry rotation speed introduce tradeoffs among image quality, data consistency and data sparsity. This work describes and evaluates a new reconstruction-of-difference (RoD) approach that is robust to such challenges. A fast digital simulation framework was developed to test the performance of the RoD over standard reference reconstruction methods such as filtered back-projection (FBP) and penalized likelihood (PL) over a broad range of imaging conditions, grouped into three scenarios to test the trade-off between data consistency, data sparsity and peak contrast. Two experiments were also conducted using a CBCT prototype and an anthropomorphic neurovascular phantom to test the simulation findings in real data. Performance was evaluated primarily in terms of normalized root mean square error (NRMSE) in comparison to truth, with reconstruction parameters chosen to optimize performance in each case to ensure fair comparison. The RoD approach reduced NRMSE in reconstructed images by up to 50%-53% compared to FBP and up to 29%-31% compared to PL for each scenario. Scan protocols well suited to the RoD approach were identified that balance tradeoffs among data consistency, sparsity and peak contrast-for example, a CBCT-A scan with 128 projections acquired in 8.5 s over a 180° + fan angle half-scan for a time attenuation curve with ~8.5 s time-to-peak and 600 HU peak contrast. With imaging conditions such as the simulation scenarios of fixed data sparsity (i.e. varying levels of data consistency and peak contrast), the experiments confirmed the reduction of NRMSE by 34% and 17% compared to FBP and PL, respectively. The RoD approach demonstrated superior performance in 3D angiography compared to FBP and PL in all simulation and physical experiments, suggesting the possibility of CBCT-A on low-cost, mobile imaging platforms suitable to the point-of-care. The algorithm demonstrated accurate reconstruction with a high degree of robustness against data sparsity and inconsistency.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Cerebral Angiography/methods , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/statistics & numerical data , Phantoms, Imaging , Humans
5.
Phys Med Biol ; 61(8): 3180-207, 2016 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27025783

ABSTRACT

Detection of acute intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) is important for diagnosis and treatment of traumatic brain injury, stroke, postoperative bleeding, and other head and neck injuries. This paper details the design and development of a cone-beam CT (CBCT) system developed specifically for the detection of low-contrast ICH in a form suitable for application at the point of care. Recognizing such a low-contrast imaging task to be a major challenge in CBCT, the system design began with a rigorous analysis of task-based detectability including critical aspects of system geometry, hardware configuration, and artifact correction. The imaging performance model described the three-dimensional (3D) noise-equivalent quanta using a cascaded systems model that included the effects of scatter, scatter correction, hardware considerations of complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) and flat-panel detectors (FPDs), and digitization bit depth. The performance was analyzed with respect to a low-contrast (40-80 HU), medium-frequency task representing acute ICH detection. The task-based detectability index was computed using a non-prewhitening observer model. The optimization was performed with respect to four major design considerations: (1) system geometry (including source-to-detector distance (SDD) and source-to-axis distance (SAD)); (2) factors related to the x-ray source (including focal spot size, kVp, dose, and tube power); (3) scatter correction and selection of an antiscatter grid; and (4) x-ray detector configuration (including pixel size, additive electronics noise, field of view (FOV), and frame rate, including both CMOS and a-Si:H FPDs). Optimal design choices were also considered with respect to practical constraints and available hardware components. The model was verified in comparison to measurements on a CBCT imaging bench as a function of the numerous design parameters mentioned above. An extended geometry (SAD = 750 mm, SDD = 1100 mm) was found to be advantageous in terms of patient dose (20 mGy) and scatter reduction, while a more isocentric configuration (SAD = 550 mm, SDD = 1000 mm) was found to give a more compact and mechanically favorable configuration with minor tradeoff in detectability. An x-ray source with a 0.6 mm focal spot size provided the best compromise between spatial resolution requirements and x-ray tube power. Use of a modest anti-scatter grid (8:1 GR) at a 20 mGy dose provided slight improvement (~5-10%) in the detectability index, but the benefit was lost at reduced dose. The potential advantages of CMOS detectors over FPDs were quantified, showing that both detectors provided sufficient spatial resolution for ICH detection, while the former provided a potentially superior low-dose performance, and the latter provided the requisite FOV for volumetric imaging in a centered-detector geometry. Task-based imaging performance modeling provides an important starting point for CBCT system design, especially for the challenging task of ICH detection, which is somewhat beyond the capabilities of existing CBCT platforms. The model identifies important tradeoffs in system geometry and hardware configuration, and it supports the development of a dedicated CBCT system for point-of-care application. A prototype suitable for clinical studies is in development based on this analysis.


Subject(s)
Cone-Beam Computed Tomography/standards , Head/diagnostic imaging , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/standards , Models, Theoretical , Phantoms, Imaging , Tomography Scanners, X-Ray Computed/standards , Algorithms , Artifacts , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography/methods , Fluoroscopy , Humans , X-Rays
6.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28367540

ABSTRACT

Prompt and reliable detection of acute intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) is critical to treatment of a number of neurological disorders. Cone-beam CT (CBCT) systems are potentially suitable for detecting ICH (contrast 40-80 HU, size down to 1 mm) at the point of care but face major challenges in image quality requirements. Statistical reconstruction demonstrates improved noise-resolution tradeoffs in CBCT head imaging, but its capability in improving image quality with respect to the task of ICH detection remains to be fully investigated. Moreover, statistical reconstruction typically exhibits nonuniform spatial resolution and noise characteristics, leading to spatially varying detectability of ICH for a conventional penalty. In this work, we propose a spatially varying penalty design that maximizes detectability of ICH at each location throughout the image. We leverage theoretical analysis of spatial resolution and noise for a penalized weighted least-squares (PWLS) estimator, and employ a task-based imaging performance descriptor in terms of detectability index using a nonprewhitening observer model. Performance prediction was validated using a 3D anthropomorphic head phantom. The proposed penalty achieved superior detectability throughout the head and improved detectability in regions adjacent to the skull base by ~10% compared to a conventional uniform penalty. PWLS reconstruction with the proposed penalty demonstrated excellent visualization of simulated ICH in different regions of the head and provides further support for development of dedicated CBCT head scanning at the point-of-care in the neuro ICU and OR.

7.
J Mol Biol ; 195(1): 185-91, 1987 May 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3656409

ABSTRACT

The techniques of small-angle X-ray scattering and analysis that have been developed by the authors are used to investigate the influence of ionic strength on the superhelical conformation of native COP608 plasmid DNA in solution. For salt concentrations below 0.1 M, the superhelicity is partitioned between twisting (Tw) and writhing (Wr) in the ratio delta Tw/Wr = 2. Near the physiological salt concentration, [Na+] = 0.2 M, a co-operative transition is observed in which the pitch angle of the toroidal superhelix is drastically decreased. This results in an almost complete relaxation of writhe. At salt concentrations in excess of the threshold for this transition, the superhelical partitioning occurs in the ratio delta Tw/Wr greater than 25. Energetic considerations support the suggestion that this transition results from co-operative, superhelical B to Z transconformation reactions at susceptible sites. A method is discussed that will enable the direct measurement of this secondary structural transition by means of X-ray scattering.


Subject(s)
DNA, Superhelical , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Osmolar Concentration , Scattering, Radiation , X-Rays
8.
Phys Med Biol ; 60(16): 6153-75, 2015 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26225912

ABSTRACT

Non-contrast CT reliably detects fresh blood in the brain and is the current front-line imaging modality for intracranial hemorrhage such as that occurring in acute traumatic brain injury (contrast ~40-80 HU, size > 1 mm). We are developing flat-panel detector (FPD) cone-beam CT (CBCT) to facilitate such diagnosis in a low-cost, mobile platform suitable for point-of-care deployment. Such a system may offer benefits in the ICU, urgent care/concussion clinic, ambulance, and sports and military theatres. However, current FPD-CBCT systems face significant challenges that confound low-contrast, soft-tissue imaging. Artifact correction can overcome major sources of bias in FPD-CBCT but imparts noise amplification in filtered backprojection (FBP). Model-based reconstruction improves soft-tissue image quality compared to FBP by leveraging a high-fidelity forward model and image regularization. In this work, we develop a novel penalized weighted least-squares (PWLS) image reconstruction method with a noise model that includes accurate modeling of the noise characteristics associated with the two dominant artifact corrections (scatter and beam-hardening) in CBCT and utilizes modified weights to compensate for noise amplification imparted by each correction. Experiments included real data acquired on a FPD-CBCT test-bench and an anthropomorphic head phantom emulating intra-parenchymal hemorrhage. The proposed PWLS method demonstrated superior noise-resolution tradeoffs in comparison to FBP and PWLS with conventional weights (viz. at matched 0.50 mm spatial resolution, CNR = 11.9 compared to CNR = 5.6 and CNR = 9.9, respectively) and substantially reduced image noise especially in challenging regions such as skull base. The results support the hypothesis that with high-fidelity artifact correction and statistical reconstruction using an accurate post-artifact-correction noise model, FPD-CBCT can achieve image quality allowing reliable detection of intracranial hemorrhage.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography/methods , Head/diagnostic imaging , Models, Statistical , Artifacts , Humans , Signal-To-Noise Ratio
9.
Med Phys ; 39(6Part28): 3973, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28519605

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To assess the diagnostic performance of a prototype cone-beam CT (CBCT) scanner developed for musculoskeletal extremity imaging. Studies involved controlled observer studies conducted subsequent to rigorous technical assessment as well as patient images from the first clinical trial in imaging the hand and knee. METHODS: Performance assessment included: 1.) rigorous technical assessment; 2.) controlled observer studies using CBCT images of cadaveric specimens; and 3.) first clinical images. Technical assessment included measurement of spatial resolution (MTF), constrast, and noise (SDNR) versus kVp and dose using standard CT phantoms. Diagnostic performance in comparison to multi- detector CT (MDCT) was assessed in controlled observer studies involving 12 cadaveric hands and knees scanned with and without abnormality (fracture). Observer studies involved five radiologists rating pertinent diagnostics tasks in 9-point preference and 10-point diagnostic satisfaction scales. Finally, the first clinical images from an ongoing pilot study were assessed in terms of diagnostic utility in disease assessment and overall workflow in patient setup. RESULTS: Quantitative assessment demonstrated sub-mm spatial resolution (MTF exceeding 10% out to 15-20 cm-1) and SDNR sufficient for relevant soft-tissue visualization tasks at dose <10 mGy. Observer studies confirmed optimal acquisition techniques and demonstrated superior utility of combined soft-tissue visualization and isotropic spatial resolution in diagnostic tasks. Images from the patient trial demonstrate exquisite contrast and detail and the ability to detect tissue impingement in weight-bearing exams. CONCLUSIONS: The prototype CBCT scanner provides isotropic spatial resolution superior to standard-protocol MDCT with soft-tissue visibility sufficient for a broad range of diagnostic tasks in musculoskeletal radiology. Dosimetry and workflow were advantageous in comparison to whole-body MDCT. Multi-mode and weight-bearing capabilities add valuable functionality. An ongoing clinical study further assesses diagnostic utility and defines the role of such technology in the diagnostic arsenal. - Research Grant, Carestream Health - Research Grant, National Institutes of Health 2R01-CA-112163.

11.
Am J Community Psychol ; 11(5): 543-52, 1983 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6650460

ABSTRACT

As a follow-up to an aggregate study of the relationship of economic factors to the utilization of mental health facilities, this study, using individual data, attempted to determine the associative strengths of income factors--welfare and unemployment--for utilization of community mental health centers (CMHCs) in rural Appalachia. On the basis of the earlier study and of previous studies of social class and utilization of CMHCs it was hypothesized that for this sample of 151 clients of eight CMHCs in Ohio and West Virginia, unemployment and welfare factors would be most strongly associated with utilization. A multiple regression analysis indicated that when compared to other independent variables, such as life satisfaction, demographic, and personal factors, receipt of food stamps was the most important factor in relating to utilization; this relationship was considerably stronger when the more rural areas were separated for analysis. Some relationship between employment status and utilization was also found. The results are discussed in terms of unique patterns of social service dependency in more rural Appalachia.


Subject(s)
Community Mental Health Centers/statistics & numerical data , Rural Health , Socioeconomic Factors , Adjustment Disorders/therapy , Adult , Appalachian Region , Crisis Intervention , Employment , Humans , Ohio , Urban Health , West Virginia
12.
Am J Community Psychol ; 10(6): 669-86, 1982 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7165014

ABSTRACT

This exploratory study examined the relative predictive strengths of selected economic factors (welfare cases, banking activity, unemployment, retail sales, motor vehicle sales) for utilization of mental health services (hotline calls, intake at community mental health centers and admissions at mental hospitals) over a 78-month period in rural Appalachia. Monthly data were tested for autocorrelation and adjusted for seasonality and inflation. Regression analyses indicated that (a) economic factors did account for a considerable portion of variance in mental health factors; (b) these factors predicted mental hospital admissions and hotline calls; (c) strengths of these relationships were quite consistent across the areas sampled, but the directions sometimes were different; (d) welfare factors were the best predictors of utilization; (e) Aid to Families with Dependent Children was generally the best single predictor of utilization, especially when mental health factors were lagged by 3 months. A causative model describing the decision-making process involved in the utilization of mental health services was presented.


Subject(s)
Community Mental Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Rural Population , Socioeconomic Factors , Appalachian Region , Humans
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 80(3): 741-4, 1983 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6572365

ABSTRACT

This communication presents measurements, made with a newly constructed position-sensitive detector, of the small-angle x-ray scattering from the first-order superhelix of native COP608 plasmid DNA. This instrument measures intensities free of slit effects and provides good resolution in the region of interest. The reported observations, made both in the presence and in the absence of intercalator, closely fit the scattering patterns calculated for noninterwound helical first-order superhelices. These results are consistent with a toroidal helical structure but not with interwound conformations. The pitch angle alpha and contour length per turn c are reported for the native molecule at several concentrations of the platinum intercalating compound. From these parameters, the best-fitting toroidal helix is constructed and its geometry is investigated. The specific linking difference of the native molecule is estimated to be delta Lk/Lk0 approximately equal to -0.055. If the best-fitting toroidal helix is taken to be the actual structure, the partitioning of superhelicity between twist and writhe occurs in the approximate ratio of 2:1.


Subject(s)
DNA, Superhelical , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Plasmids , Scattering, Radiation , Staphylococcus aureus , X-Ray Diffraction
14.
Radiology ; 215(2): 543-53, 2000 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10796938

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To determine the degree of irreversible image compression detectable in conservative viewing conditions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: An image-comparison workstation, which alternately displayed two registered and magnified versions of an image, was used to study observer detection of image degradation introduced by irreversible compression. Five observers evaluated 20 16-bit posteroanterior digital chest radiographs compressed with Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) or wavelet-based trellis-coded quantization (WTCQ) algorithms at compression ratios of 8:1-128:1 and x2 magnification by using (a) traditional two-alternative forced choice; (b) original-revealed two-alternative forced choice, in which the noncompressed image is identified to the observer; and (c) a resolution-metric method of matching test images to degraded reference images. RESULTS: The visually lossless threshold was between 8:1 and 16:1 for four observers. JPEG compression resulted in performance as good as that with WTCQ compression at these ratios. The original-revealed forced-choice method was faster and as sensitive as the two-alternative forced-choice method. The resolution-metric results were robust and provided information on performance above visually lossless levels. CONCLUSION: The image-comparison workstation is a versatile tool for comparative assessment of image quality. At x2 magnification, images compressed with either JPEG or WTCQ algorithms were indistinguishable from unaltered original images for most observers at compression ratios between 8:1 and 16:1, indicating that 10:1 compression is acceptable for primary image interpretation.


Subject(s)
Computer Systems , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Radiography, Thoracic , Algorithms , Artifacts , Data Display , Female , Humans , Lung Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Lung Diseases, Interstitial/diagnostic imaging , Male , Mediastinal Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Observer Variation , Pneumonia/diagnostic imaging , Prostheses and Implants , Radiographic Image Enhancement , Radiographic Magnification , Sensitivity and Specificity , Software
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