Title :
Tomographic Reconstruction of Dynamic Cardiac Image Sequences
Author :
Gravier, Erwan ; Yang, Yongyi ; Jin, Mingwu
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Illinois Inst. of Technol., Chicago, IL
fDate :
4/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In this paper, we propose an approach for the reconstruction of dynamic images from a gated cardiac data acquisition. The goal is to obtain an image sequence that can show simultaneously both cardiac motion and time-varying image activities. To account for the cardiac motion, the cardiac cycle is divided into a number of gate intervals, and a time-varying image function is reconstructed for each gate. In addition, to cope with the under-determined nature of the problem, the time evolution at each pixel is modeled by a B-spline function. The dynamic images for the different gates are then jointly determined using maximum a posteriori estimation, in which a motion-compensated smoothing prior is introduced to exploit the similarity among the different gates. The proposed algorithm is evaluated using a dynamic version of the 4-D gated mathematical cardiac torso phantom simulating a gated single photon emission computed tomography perfusion acquisition with Technitium-99m labeled Teboroxime. We thoroughly evaluated the performance of the proposed algorithm using several quantitative measures, including signal-to-noise ratio analysis, bias-variance plot, and time activity curves. Our results demonstrate that the proposed joint reconstruction approach can improve significantly the accuracy of the reconstruction
Keywords :
cardiology; data acquisition; image reconstruction; image sequences; maximum likelihood estimation; medical image processing; motion compensation; single photon emission computed tomography; splines (mathematics); B-spline function; bias-variance plot; cardiac data acquisition; cardiac motion; dynamic cardiac image sequences; dynamic images reconstruction; gated single photon emission computed tomography; maximum a posteriori estimation; motion-compensated smoothing prior; signal-to-noise ratio; time activity curves; time-varying image activities; time-varying image function; tomographic reconstruction; Computational modeling; Data acquisition; Image reconstruction; Image sequences; Imaging phantoms; Maximum a posteriori estimation; Smoothing methods; Spline; Tomography; Torso; Dynamic cardiac image reconstruction; incremental gradient algorithm; motion compensation; single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT); Algorithms; Artifacts; Gated Blood-Pool Imaging; Heart; Humans; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Movement; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Subtraction Technique; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon;
Journal_Title :
Image Processing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIP.2006.891328