Title :
Iterative reconstruction with attenuation compensation from cone-beam projections acquired via non-planar orbit
Author :
Weng, Yi ; Zeng, Gengsheng L. ; Gullberg, Grant T.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Utah Univ., Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Abstract :
Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging with cone-beam collimators provides improved sensitivity and spatial resolution for imaging small objects with large field-of-view detectors. It is known that Tuy´s (1983) cone-beam data sufficiency condition must be met in order to obtain artifact-free reconstructions. Even though Tuy´s condition was derived for attenuation-free situation, the authors hypothesize that an artifact-free reconstruction can be obtained even if the cone-beam data are attenuated, provided the imaging orbit satisfies Tuy´s condition and the exact attenuation map. In the authors´ studies, emission data are acquired using nonplanar orbit such as circle-and-line orbit to acquire sufficient data for cone-beam tomographic reconstruction. An iterative conjugate gradient reconstruction algorithm is used to reconstruct projection data with a pre-acquired attenuation map. Quantitative accuracy of the attenuation corrected emission reconstruction is significantly improved. The authors observe that the cone-beam iterative algorithms are very sensitive to the projection and backprojection models, because each voxel is sampled anisotropically. Sampling artifacts (i.e., aliasing artifacts) sometimes are very severe for non-planar orbit data acquisition geometries. Better voxel models and sampling geometries are required in further investigations
Keywords :
gamma-ray absorption; image reconstruction; iterative methods; medical image processing; single photon emission computed tomography; SPECT imaging; Tuy´s condition; aliasing artifacts; anisotropically-sampled voxels; artifact-free reconstruction; attenuation compensation; attenuation-free situation; circle-and-line orbit; cone-beam projections; data acquisition geometry; exact attenuation map; iterative conjugate gradient reconstruction algorithm; iterative reconstruction; medical diagnostic imaging; nonplanar orbit; nuclear medicine; sampling artifacts; Attenuation; Detectors; Geometry; Image reconstruction; Object detection; Optical collimators; Reconstruction algorithms; Sampling methods; Single photon emission computed tomography; Spatial resolution;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference Record, 1995., 1995 IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3180-X
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.1995.510489