This paper provides a fast and patient-specific scatter artifact correction method for cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) used in image-guided interventional procedures. Due to increased irradiated volume of interest in CBCT imaging, scatter radiation has increased dramatically compared to 2D imaging, leading to a degradation of image quality. In this study, we propose a scatter artifact correction strategy using an analytical convolution-based model whose free parameters are estimated using a rough estimation of scatter profiles from the acquired cone-beam projections. It was evaluated using Monte Carlo simulations with both monochromatic and polychromatic X-ray sources. The results demonstrated that the proposed method significantly reduced the scatter-induced shading artifacts and recovered CT numbers.
Dual-energy CT has the potential to overcome many of the limitations of routine single-energy CT scanning, such a,.., the potential to provide quantitative imaging via electron density, effective atomic munber, and virtual monochromatic imaging and the potential to completely eliminate beam-hardening artifacts via projection space decomposition. While the potential clinical benefit is strong, a possible barrier to more frequent clinical use of dual-energy CT scanning is radiation dose for high quality images. While image quality in dual-energy CT depends on a munber of factors, including dose partitioning, the choice of kV pair, and the amount of pre filtration used, a munber of strategies have been employed to improve image quality in dual-energy CT. Four main methods are: (1) increa,..,e the radiation dose, (2) increase the slice thickness, (3) perform voxel averaging, or (4) use noise reduction algorithms. While these methods offer options for improving image quality, ideally, it is desirable not to have to increase radiation dose or sacrifice spatial resolution (in the x-y plane or in the z-direction). Therefore, it is the purpose of this work to investigate the application of Prior Image Constrained Compressed Sensing (PICCS) in dual-energy CT to reduce radiation dose without sacrificing image quality. In particular, we investigate the use of PICCS in dual-energy CT to generate material density images at half the radiation dose of a commonly used gemstone spectral imaging (GSI) protocol. lVIaterial density images are generated using half the radiation dose, and virtual monochromatic images are generated as a linear combination of half-dose material density images. In this abstract, qualitative and quantitative evaluation are provided to assess the performance of PICCS relative to FBP images at the full dose level and at the half dose level.
Radiation dose reduction remains at the forefront of research in computed tomography. X-ray tube parameters such as
tube current can be lowered to reduce dose; however, images become prohibitively noisy when the tube current is too
low. Wavelet denoising is one of many noise reduction techniques. However, traditional wavelet techniques have the
tendency to create an artificial noise texture, due to the nonuniform denoising across the image, which is undesirable
from a diagnostic perspective. This work presents a new implementation of wavelet denoising that is able to achieve
noise reduction, while still preserving spatial resolution. Further, the proposed method has the potential to improve those
unnatural noise textures. The technique was tested on both phantom and animal datasets (Catphan phantom and timeresolved
swine heart scan) acquired on a GE Discovery VCT scanner. A number of tube currents were used to
investigate the potential for dose reduction.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.