Impact of time-of-flight on indirect 3D and direct 4D parametric image reconstruction in the presence of inconsistent dynamic PET data

被引:6
|
作者
Kotasidis, F. A. [1 ,2 ]
Mehranian, A. [1 ]
Zaidi, H. [1 ,3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hosp Geneva, Div Nucl Med & Mol Imaging, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland
[2] Univ Manchester, Wolfson Mol Imaging Ctr, MAHSC, Manchester M20 3LJ, Lancs, England
[3] Univ Geneva, Geneva Neurosci Ctr, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland
[4] Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Dept Nucl Med & Mol Imaging, NL-9700 RB Groningen, Netherlands
来源
PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY | 2016年 / 61卷 / 09期
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
PET; time-of-flight; direct 4D reconstruction; parametric imaging; POSITRON-EMISSION-TOMOGRAPHY; MOTION CORRECTION; TOF PET; ATTENUATION CORRECTION; INPUT FUNCTIONS; RESOLUTION; BODY; COMPENSATION; REDUCTION; ALGORITHM;
D O I
10.1088/0031-9155/61/9/3443
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Kinetic parameter estimation in dynamic PET suffers from reduced accuracy and precision when parametric maps are estimated using kinetic modelling following image reconstruction of the dynamic data. Direct approaches to parameter estimation attempt to directly estimate the kinetic parameters from the measured dynamic data within a unified framework. Such image reconstruction methods have been shown to generate parametric maps of improved precision and accuracy in dynamic PET. However, due to the interleaving between the tomographic and kinetic modelling steps, any tomographic or kinetic modelling errors in certain regions or frames, tend to spatially or temporally propagate. This results in biased kinetic parameters and thus limits the benefits of such direct methods. Kinetic modelling errors originate from the inability to construct a common single kinetic model for the entire field-of-view, and such errors in erroneously modelled regions could spatially propagate. Adaptive models have been used within 4D image reconstruction to mitigate the problem, though they are complex and difficult to optimize. Tomographic errors in dynamic imaging on the other hand, can originate from involuntary patient motion between dynamic frames, as well as from emission/transmission mismatch. Motion correction schemes can be used, however, if residual errors exist or motion correction is not included in the study protocol, errors in the affected dynamic frames could potentially propagate either temporally, to other frames during the kinetic modelling step or spatially, during the tomographic step. In this work, we demonstrate a new strategy to minimize such error propagation in direct 4D image reconstruction, focusing on the tomographic step rather than the kinetic modelling step, by incorporating time-of-flight (TOF) within a direct 4D reconstruction framework. Using ever improving TOF resolutions (580 ps, 440 ps, 300 ps and 160 ps), we demonstrate that direct 4D TOF image reconstruction can substantially prevent kinetic parameter error propagation either from erroneous kinetic modelling, inter-frame motion or emission/transmission mismatch. Furthermore, we demonstrate the benefits of TOF in parameter estimation when conventional post-reconstruction (3D) methods are used and compare the potential improvements to direct 4D methods. Further improvements could possibly be achieved in the future by combining TOF direct 4D image reconstruction with adaptive kinetic models and interframe motion correction schemes.
引用
收藏
页码:3443 / 3471
页数:29
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Optimal gating compared to 3D and 4D PET reconstruction for characterization of lung tumours
    van Elmpt, Wouter
    Hamill, James
    Jones, Judson
    De Ruysscher, Dirk
    Lambin, Philippe
    Ollers, Michel
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING, 2011, 38 (05) : 843 - 855
  • [42] Real-Time 3D PET Image with Pseudoinverse Reconstruction
    Lopez-Montes, Alejandro
    Galve, Pablo
    Manuel Udias, Jose
    Cal-Gonzalez, Jacobo
    Jose Vaquero, Juan
    Desco, Manuel
    Herraiz, Joaquin L.
    APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2020, 10 (08):
  • [43] A Configurable and Real-Time Multi-Frequency 3D Image Signal Processor for Indirect Time-of-Flight Sensors
    Chen, Faquan
    Ying, Rendong
    Xue, Jianwei
    Wen, Fei
    Liu, Peilin
    IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL, 2022, 22 (08) : 7834 - 7845
  • [44] A comparison of 4D time-resolved MRA with keyhole and 3D time-of-flight MRA at 3.0 T for the evaluation of cerebral aneurysms
    Qian Wu
    Ming-Hua Li
    BMC Neurology, 12
  • [45] A comparison of 4D time-resolved MRA with keyhole and 3D time-of-flight MRA at 3.0 T for the evaluation of cerebral aneurysms
    Wu, Qian
    Li, Ming-Hua
    BMC NEUROLOGY, 2012, 12
  • [46] 4D MR Reconstruction Based on Real-Time 3D Ultrasound for Image-Guided Radiotherapy
    Jupitz, S.
    Holmes, J.
    Bednarz, B.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2021, 48 (06)
  • [47] 3D Point Cloud Reconstruction from a Single 4D Light Field Image
    Farhood, Helia
    Perry, Stuart
    Cheng, Eva
    Kim, Juno
    OPTICS, PHOTONICS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES FOR IMAGING APPLICATIONS VI, 2021, 11353
  • [48] Recent Advances in 3D Data Acquisition and Processing by Time-of-Flight Camera
    He, Yu
    Chen, Shengyong
    IEEE ACCESS, 2019, 7 : 12495 - 12510
  • [49] Performance Evaluation of 3D Keypoint Detectors for Time-Of-Flight Depth Data
    Ghorpade, Vijaya K.
    Checchin, Paul
    Malaterre, Laurent
    Trassoudaine, Laurent
    2016 14TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONTROL, AUTOMATION, ROBOTICS AND VISION (ICARCV), 2016,
  • [50] Laser-based Navigation Enhanced with 3D Time-of-Flight Data
    Yuan, Fang
    Swadzba, Agnes
    Philippsen, Roland
    Engin, Orhan
    Hanheide, Marc
    Wachsmuth, Sven
    ICRA: 2009 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION, VOLS 1-7, 2009, : 2231 - +