Autor: |
Kadrmas DJ; Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 27599, USA. kadrmas@mirl.med.utah.edu, Frey EC, Karimi SS, Tsui BM |
Jazyk: |
angličtina |
Zdroj: |
Physics in medicine and biology [Phys Med Biol] 1998 Apr; Vol. 43 (4), pp. 857-73. |
DOI: |
10.1088/0031-9155/43/4/014 |
Abstrakt: |
Accurate scatter compensation in SPECT can be performed by modelling the scatter response function during the reconstruction process. This method is called reconstruction-based scatter compensation (RBSC). It has been shown that RBSC has a number of advantages over other methods of compensating for scatter, but using RBSC for fully 3D compensation has resulted in prohibitively long reconstruction times. In this work we propose two new methods that can be used in conjunction with existing methods to achieve marked reductions in RBSC reconstruction times. The first method, coarse-grid scatter modelling, significantly accelerates the scatter model by exploiting the fact that scatter is dominated by low-frequency information. The second method, intermittent RBSC, further accelerates the reconstruction process by limiting the number of iterations during which scatter is modelled. The fast implementations were evaluated using a Monte Carlo simulated experiment of the 3D MCAT phantom with 99mTc tracer, and also using experimentally acquired data with 201Tl tracer. Results indicated that these fast methods can reconstruct, with fully 3D compensation, images very similar to those obtained using standard RBSC methods, and in reconstruction times that are an order of magnitude shorter. Using these methods, fully 3D iterative reconstruction with RBSC can be performed well within the realm of clinically realistic times (under 10 minutes for 64 x 64 x 24 image reconstruction). |
Databáze: |
MEDLINE |
Externí odkaz: |
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