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Reconstruction for time-domain in vivo EPR 3D multigradient oximetric imaging--a parallel processing perspective.

Authors :
Dharmaraj CD
Thadikonda K
Fletcher AR
Doan PN
Devasahayam N
Matsumoto S
Johnson CA
Cook JA
Mitchell JB
Subramanian S
Krishna MC
Source :
International journal of biomedical imaging [Int J Biomed Imaging] 2009; Vol. 2009, pp. 528639. Date of Electronic Publication: 2009 Aug 05.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Three-dimensional Oximetric Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Imaging using the Single Point Imaging modality generates unpaired spin density and oxygen images that can readily distinguish between normal and tumor tissues in small animals. It is also possible with fast imaging to track the changes in tissue oxygenation in response to the oxygen content in the breathing air. However, this involves dealing with gigabytes of data for each 3D oximetric imaging experiment involving digital band pass filtering and background noise subtraction, followed by 3D Fourier reconstruction. This process is rather slow in a conventional uniprocessor system. This paper presents a parallelization framework using OpenMP runtime support and parallel MATLAB to execute such computationally intensive programs. The Intel compiler is used to develop a parallel C++ code based on OpenMP. The code is executed on four Dual-Core AMD Opteron shared memory processors, to reduce the computational burden of the filtration task significantly. The results show that the parallel code for filtration has achieved a speed up factor of 46.66 as against the equivalent serial MATLAB code. In addition, a parallel MATLAB code has been developed to perform 3D Fourier reconstruction. Speedup factors of 4.57 and 4.25 have been achieved during the reconstruction process and oximetry computation, for a data set with 23 x 23 x 23 gradient steps. The execution time has been computed for both the serial and parallel implementations using different dimensions of the data and presented for comparison. The reported system has been designed to be easily accessible even from low-cost personal computers through local internet (NIHnet). The experimental results demonstrate that the parallel computing provides a source of high computational power to obtain biophysical parameters from 3D EPR oximetric imaging, almost in real-time.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1687-4188
Volume :
2009
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of biomedical imaging
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19672315
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2009/528639