Title :
Fast Count-Regulated OSEM Reconstruction With Adaptive Resolution Recovery
Author :
Vaissier, Pieter E. B. ; Goorden, Marlies C. ; Taylor, Aaron B. ; Beekman, Freek J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiat. Sci. & Technol., Delft Univ. of Technol., Delft, Netherlands
Abstract :
Ordered subsets expectation maximization (OSEM) is widely used to accelerate tomographic reconstruction. Speed-up of OSEM over maximum likelihood expectation maximization (MLEM) is close to the number of subsets (NS). Recently we significantly increased the speed-up achievable with OSEM by specific subset choice (pixel-based OSEM). However, a high NS can cause undesirable noise levels, quantitative inaccuracy or even disappearance of lesions in low-activity image regions, while a low NS leads to prohibitively long reconstructions or unrecovered details in highly active regions. Here, we introduce count-regulated OSEM (CROSEM) which locally adapts the effective NS based on the estimated amount of detected photons originating from individual voxels. CROSEM was tested using multi-pinhole SPECT simulations and in vivo imaging. With the maximum NS set to 128, CROSEM attained acceleration factors close to 128 in high-activity regions and kept quantitative accuracy in low-activity regions close to that of MLEM. At equal cold-lesion contrast in high-activity regions, CROSEM exhibited lower noise than MLEM in low-activity regions. CROSEM is a fast and stable alternative to OSEM, preventing excessive image noise and quantitative errors in low-activity regions while achieving high-resolution recovery in structures with high activity uptake.
Keywords :
expectation-maximisation algorithm; image reconstruction; medical image processing; noise; single photon emission computed tomography; tumours; adaptive resolution recovery; cold-lesion contrast; fast count-regulated OSEM reconstruction; image noise levels; in vivo imaging; low-activity image regions; maximum likelihood expectation maximization; multipinhole SPECT simulations; ordered subsets expectation maximization; photon detection; pixel-based OSEM; single photon emission computed tomography; tomographic reconstruction; voxels; Acceleration; Collimators; Detectors; Image reconstruction; Image resolution; Photonics; Single photon emission computed tomography; Image reconstruction; positron emission tomography (PET); reconstruction algorithms; single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT);
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2013.2279851