DocumentCode
10754
Title
Linearity and Shift Invariance for Quantitative Magnetic Particle Imaging
Author
Kuan Lu ; Goodwill, P.W. ; Saritas, E.U. ; Bo Zheng ; Conolly, S.M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Bioeng., Univ. of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA
Volume
32
Issue
9
fYear
2013
fDate
Sept. 2013
Firstpage
1565
Lastpage
1575
Abstract
Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) is a promising tracer imaging modality that employs a kidney-safe contrast agent and does not use ionizing radiation. MPI already shows high contrast and sensitivity in small animal imaging, with great potential for many clinical applications, including angiography, cancer detection, inflammation imaging, and treatment monitoring. Currently, almost all clinically relevant imaging techniques can be modeled as systems with linearity and shift invariance (LSI), characteristics crucial for quantification and diagnostic utility. In theory, MPI has been proven to be LSI. However, in practice, high-pass filters designed to remove unavoidable direct feedthrough interference also remove information crucial to ensuring LSI in MPI scans. In this work, we present a complete theoretical and experimental description of the image artifacts from filtering. We then propose and validate a robust algorithm to completely restore the lost information for the x-space MPI method. We provide the theoretical, simulated, and experimental proof that our algorithm indeed restores the LSI properties of MPI.
Keywords
biomedical MRI; cancer; filtering theory; high-pass filters; kidney; magnetic particles; medical image processing; patient monitoring; sensitivity; angiography; cancer detection; clinical applications; clinically relevant imaging technique; diagnostic utility; high-pass filters; image artifacts; inflammation imaging; kidney-safe contrast agent; linearity invariance; quantitative magnetic particle imaging; sensitivity; shift invariance; small animal imaging; tracer imaging modality; treatment monitoring; unavoidable direct feedthrough interference; x-space MPI method; Harmonic analysis; Image reconstruction; Large scale integration; Magnetic resonance imaging; Nanoparticles; Power harmonic filters; Angiography; direct current (dc) recovery; direct feedthrough; filtering; interference; linearity and shift invariance; magnetic particle imaging; Acoustics; Algorithms; Carotid Arteries; Carotid Stenosis; Computer Simulation; Contrast Media; Diagnostic Imaging; Fourier Analysis; Humans; Magnetite Nanoparticles; Models, Biological; Models, Theoretical; Phantoms, Imaging;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0062
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMI.2013.2257177
Filename
6494648
Link To Document