Title :
An efficient Fourier method for 3-D radon inversion in exact cone-beam CT reconstruction
Author :
Schaller, Stefan ; Flohr, Thomas ; Steffen, Peter
Author_Institution :
Siemens AG, Erlangen, Germany
fDate :
4/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The radial derivative of the three-dimensional (3-D) radon transform of an object is an important intermediate result in many analytically exact cone-beam reconstruction algorithms. The authors briefly review Grangeat´s (1991) approach for calculating radon derivative data from cone-beam projections and then present a new, efficient method for 3-D radon inversion, i.e., reconstruction of the image from the radial derivative of the 3-D radon transform, called direct Fourier inversion (DFI). The method is based directly on the 3-D Fourier slice theorem. From the 3-D radon derivative data, which is assumed to be sampled on a spherical grid, the 3-D Fourier transform of the object is calculated by performing fast Fourier transforms (FFTs) along radial lines in the radon space. Then, an interpolation is performed from the spherical to a Cartesian grid using a 3-D gridding step in the frequency domain. Finally, this 3-D Fourier transform is transformed back to the spatial domain via 3-D inverse FFT. The algorithm is computationally efficient with complexity in the order of N 3 log N. The authors have done reconstructions of simulated 3-D radon derivative data assuming sampling conditions and image quality requirements similar to those in medical computed tomography (CT).
Keywords :
computerised tomography; image reconstruction; medical image processing; 3-D Fourier slice theorem; 3-D gridding step; 3-D radon inversion; Cartesian grid; efficient Fourier method; exact cone-beam CT reconstruction; frequency domain; interpolation; medical computed tomography; medical diagnostic imaging; radial lines; spatial domain; spherical grid; Algorithm design and analysis; Back; Computed tomography; Fast Fourier transforms; Flexible printed circuits; Fourier transforms; Frequency domain analysis; Image reconstruction; Interpolation; Reconstruction algorithms; Algorithms; Artifacts; Computer Simulation; Fourier Analysis; Head; Humans; Image Enhancement; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Models, Statistical; Phantoms, Imaging; Tomography, X-Ray Computed;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on