Title :
Preliminary study on helical CT algorithms for patient motion estimation and compensation
Author :
Wang, Ge ; Vannier, Michael W.
Author_Institution :
Mallinckrodt Inst. of Radiol., Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., St. Louis, MO, USA
fDate :
6/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Helical computed tomography (helical/spiral CT) has replaced conventional CT in many clinical applications. In current helical CT, a patient is assumed to be rigid and motionless during scanning and planar projection sets are produced from raw data via longitudinal interpolation. However, rigid patient: motion is a problem in some cases (such as in the skull base and temporal bone imaging). Motion artifacts thus generated in reconstructed images can prevent accurate diagnosis. Modeling a uniform translational movement, the authors address how patient motion is ascertained and how it may be compensated. First, mismatch between adjacent fan-beam projections of the same orientation is determined via classical correlation, which is approximately proportional to the patient displacement projected onto an axis orthogonal to the central ray of the involved fan-beam. Then, the patient motion vector (the patient displacement per gantry rotation) is estimated from its projections using a least-square-root method. To suppress motion artifacts, adaptive interpolation algorithms are developed that synthesize full-scan and half-scan planar projection data sets, respectively. In the adaptive scheme, the interpolation is performed along inclined paths dependent upon the patient motion vector. The simulation results show that the patient motion vector can be accurately and reliably estimated using the authors´ correlation and least-square-root algorithm, patient motion artifacts can be effectively suppressed via adaptive interpolation, and adaptive half-scan interpolation is advantageous compared with its full-scan counterpart in terms of high contrast image resolution
Keywords :
biomechanics; computerised tomography; medical image processing; motion estimation; adaptive interpolation; adjacent fan-beam projections mismatch; gantry rotation; half-scan interpolation; helical CT algorithms; helical computed tomography; high contrast image resolution; least-square-root algorithm; medical diagnostic imaging; motion artifacts; patient displacement; patient motion compensation; patient motion estimation; patient motion vector; reconstructed images; rigid motionless patient; skull base imaging; temporal bone imaging; Biomedical imaging; Bones; Computed tomography; High-resolution imaging; Image generation; Image reconstruction; Image resolution; Interpolation; Medical diagnostic imaging; Motion estimation; Skull; Spirals;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on