Title :
Noise Reduction Using a Theoretically-Exact Algorithm for Helical Cone-Beam Tomography
Author :
Venkataraman, Rajesh ; Noo, Frederic ; Kudo, Hiroyuki
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Utah Univ., Salt Lake City, UT
fDate :
Oct. 29 2006-Nov. 1 2006
Abstract :
In this paper we show that the signal-to-noise ratio of helical cone-beam reconstructions based on Katsevish´s formula can be significantly improved for 16- and 32-row scanners, using the observation that Katsevich´s formula heavily relies on the concept of pi-lines. A pi-line is any segment of line that connects two source positions separated by less than one helix turn; pi-lines are such that each point within the helix cylinder belongs to one and only one pi-line. Katsevich´s formula reconstructs the sought density function at a given point using exclusively the data between the two source positions that define the pi-line through this point. We observe that the pi-line through a given point can change significantly when the point is displaced along a direction of the rotation axis of the scanner, and we use this observation to improve image noise as follows: for CT imaging with a prescribed slice thickness Deltaz, we apply Katsevich´s formula to achieve reconstruction on slices separated by a distance Deltaz/M, where M is a positive integer, then obtain any wanted slice as the average of the M closest reconstructed slices. For Katsevich´s formula, proceeding in this way with M large is fundamentally different from reconstructing with M = 1 using pre-smoothing of the data to match the slice thickness target.
Keywords :
computerised tomography; image reconstruction; medical image processing; CT imaging; Katsevish formula; computersied tomography; helical cone-beam tomography; image reconstruction; noise reduction; pi-lines; signal-to-noise ratio; Computational geometry; Computed tomography; Density functional theory; Detectors; Filtering; Image reconstruction; Noise reduction; Nuclear and plasma sciences; Signal to noise ratio; Computed Tomography; cone-beam reconstruction; detector configuration; helical geometry; multi-slice CT; noise reduction; redundancy; theoretically-exact reconstruction;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2006. IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0560-2
Electronic_ISBN :
1095-7863
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2006.354220