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Motion vector field phase-to-amplitude resampling for 4D motion-compensated cone-beam CT

Authors :
Marcus Brehm
Pascal Paysan
Julian Kuhm
Dieter Seghers
Marc Kachelrieß
Sebastian Sauppe
Source :
Physics in Medicine & Biology. 63:035032
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2018.

Abstract

We propose a phase-to-amplitude resampling (PTAR) method to reduce motion blurring in motion-compensated (MoCo) 4D cone-beam CT (CBCT) image reconstruction, without increasing the computational complexity of the motion vector field (MVF) estimation approach. PTAR is able to improve the image quality in reconstructed 4D volumes, including both regular and irregular respiration patterns. The PTAR approach starts with a robust phase-gating procedure for the initial MVF estimation and then switches to a phase-adapted amplitude gating method. The switch implies an MVF-resampling, which makes them amplitude-specific. PTAR ensures that the MVFs, which have been estimated on phase-gated reconstructions, are still valid for all amplitude-gated reconstructions. To validate the method, we use an artificially deformed clinical CT scan with a realistic breathing pattern and several patient data sets acquired with a TrueBeamTM integrated imaging system (Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto, CA, USA). Motion blurring, which still occurs around the area of the diaphragm or at small vessels above the diaphragm in artifact-specific cyclic motion compensation (acMoCo) images based on phase-gating, is significantly reduced by PTAR. Also, small lung structures appear sharper in the images. This is demonstrated both for simulated and real patient data. A quantification of the sharpness of the diaphragm confirms these findings. PTAR improves the image quality of 4D MoCo reconstructions compared to conventional phase-gated MoCo images, in particular for irregular breathing patterns. Thus, PTAR increases the robustness of MoCo reconstructions for CBCT. Because PTAR does not require any additional steps for the MVF estimation, it is computationally efficient. Our method is not restricted to CBCT but could rather be applied to other image modalities.

Details

ISSN :
13616560
Volume :
63
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics in Medicine & Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6d2bb13a6beceb06e4e1c0bb945037bf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/aaa16d