331 research outputs found

    Multiresolution spatiotemporal mechanical model of the heart as a prior to constrain the solution for 4D models of the heart.

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    In several nuclear cardiac imaging applications (SPECT and PET), images are formed by reconstructing tomographic data using an iterative reconstruction algorithm with corrections for physical factors involved in the imaging detection process and with corrections for cardiac and respiratory motion. The physical factors are modeled as coefficients in the matrix of a system of linear equations and include attenuation, scatter, and spatially varying geometric response. The solution to the tomographic problem involves solving the inverse of this system matrix. This requires the design of an iterative reconstruction algorithm with a statistical model that best fits the data acquisition. The most appropriate model is based on a Poisson distribution. Using Bayes Theorem, an iterative reconstruction algorithm is designed to determine the maximum a posteriori estimate of the reconstructed image with constraints that maximizes the Bayesian likelihood function for the Poisson statistical model. The a priori distribution is formulated as the joint entropy (JE) to measure the similarity between the gated cardiac PET image and the cardiac MRI cine image modeled as a FE mechanical model. The developed algorithm shows the potential of using a FE mechanical model of the heart derived from a cardiac MRI cine scan to constrain solutions of gated cardiac PET images

    Multitracer Guided PET Image Reconstruction

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    (An overview of) Synergistic reconstruction for multimodality/multichannel imaging methods

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    Imaging is omnipresent in modern society with imaging devices based on a zoo of physical principles, probing a specimen across different wavelengths, energies and time. Recent years have seen a change in the imaging landscape with more and more imaging devices combining that which previously was used separately. Motivated by these hardware developments, an ever increasing set of mathematical ideas is appearing regarding how data from different imaging modalities or channels can be synergistically combined in the image reconstruction process, exploiting structural and/or functional correlations between the multiple images. Here we review these developments, give pointers to important challenges and provide an outlook as to how the field may develop in the forthcoming years. This article is part of the theme issue 'Synergistic tomographic image reconstruction: part 1'

    Postreconstruction filtering of 3D PET images by using weighted higher-order singular value decomposition

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    Additional file 1. Original 3D PET images data used in this work to generate the results

    Minimax Emission Computed Tomography using High-Resolution Anatomical Side Information and B-Spline Models

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    In this paper a minimax methodology is presented for combining information from two imaging modalities having different intrinsic spatial resolutions. The focus application is emission computed tomography (ECT), a low-resolution modality for reconstruction of radionuclide tracer density, when supplemented by high-resolution anatomical boundary information extracted from a magnetic resonance image (MRI) of the same imaging volume. The MRI boundary within the two-dimensional (2-D) slice of interest is parameterized by a closed planar curve. The Cramer-Rao (CR) lower bound is used to analyze estimation errors for different boundary shapes. Under a spatially inhomogeneous Gibbs field model for the tracer density a representation for the minimax MRI-enhanced tracer density estimator is obtained. It is shown that the estimator is asymptotically equivalent to a penalized maximum likelihood (PML) estimator with resolution-selective Gibbs penalty. Quantitative comparisons are presented using the iterative space alternating generalized expectation maximization (SAGE-FM) algorithm to implement the PML estimator with and without minimax weight averaging.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/85822/1/Fessler86.pd
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