Literature DB >> 26233214

Effective noise-suppressed and artifact-reduced reconstruction of SPECT data using a preconditioned alternating projection algorithm.

Si Li1, Jiahan Zhang2, Andrzej Krol3, C Ross Schmidtlein4, Levon Vogelsang5, Lixin Shen6, Edward Lipson2, David Feiglin3, Yuesheng Xu1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The authors have recently developed a preconditioned alternating projection algorithm (PAPA) with total variation (TV) regularizer for solving the penalized-likelihood optimization model for single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) reconstruction. This algorithm belongs to a novel class of fixed-point proximity methods. The goal of this work is to investigate how PAPA performs while dealing with realistic noisy SPECT data, to compare its performance with more conventional methods, and to address issues with TV artifacts by proposing a novel form of the algorithm invoking high-order TV regularization, denoted as HOTV-PAPA, which has been explored and studied extensively in the present work.
METHODS: Using Monte Carlo methods, the authors simulate noisy SPECT data from two water cylinders; one contains lumpy "warm" background and "hot" lesions of various sizes with Gaussian activity distribution, and the other is a reference cylinder without hot lesions. The authors study the performance of HOTV-PAPA and compare it with PAPA using first-order TV regularization (TV-PAPA), the Panin-Zeng-Gullberg one-step-late method with TV regularization (TV-OSL), and an expectation-maximization algorithm with Gaussian postfilter (GPF-EM). The authors select penalty-weights (hyperparameters) by qualitatively balancing the trade-off between resolution and image noise separately for TV-PAPA and TV-OSL. However, the authors arrived at the same penalty-weight value for both of them. The authors set the first penalty-weight in HOTV-PAPA equal to the optimal penalty-weight found for TV-PAPA. The second penalty-weight needed for HOTV-PAPA is tuned by balancing resolution and the severity of staircase artifacts. The authors adjust the Gaussian postfilter to approximately match the local point spread function of GPF-EM and HOTV-PAPA. The authors examine hot lesion detectability, study local spatial resolution, analyze background noise properties, estimate mean square errors (MSEs), and report the convergence speed and computation time.
RESULTS: HOTV-PAPA yields the best signal-to-noise ratio, followed by TV-PAPA and TV-OSL/GPF-EM. The local spatial resolution of HOTV-PAPA is somewhat worse than that of TV-PAPA and TV-OSL. Images reconstructed using HOTV-PAPA have the lowest local noise power spectrum (LNPS) amplitudes, followed by TV-PAPA, TV-OSL, and GPF-EM. The LNPS peak of GPF-EM is shifted toward higher spatial frequencies than those for the three other methods. The PAPA-type methods exhibit much lower ensemble noise, ensemble voxel variance, and image roughness. HOTV-PAPA performs best in these categories. Whereas images reconstructed using both TV-PAPA and TV-OSL are degraded by severe staircase artifacts; HOTV-PAPA substantially reduces such artifacts. It also converges faster than the other three methods and exhibits the lowest overall reconstruction error level, as measured by MSE.
CONCLUSIONS: For high-noise simulated SPECT data, HOTV-PAPA outperforms TV-PAPA, GPF-EM, and TV-OSL in terms of hot lesion detectability, noise suppression, MSE, and computational efficiency. Unlike TV-PAPA and TV-OSL, HOTV-PAPA does not create sizable staircase artifacts. Moreover, HOTV-PAPA effectively suppresses noise, with only limited loss of local spatial resolution. Of the four methods, HOTV-PAPA shows the best lesion detectability, thanks to its superior noise suppression. HOTV-PAPA shows promise for clinically useful reconstructions of low-dose SPECT data.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26233214      PMCID: PMC5148207          DOI: 10.1118/1.4926846

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  25 in total

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Authors:  Brian F Hutton; Irène Buvat; Freek J Beekman
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2011-06-23       Impact factor: 3.609

5.  IQ SPECT allows a significant reduction in administered dose and acquisition time for myocardial perfusion imaging: evidence from a phantom study.

Authors:  Federico Caobelli; Stefano Ren Kaiser; James T Thackeray; Frank M Bengel; Matteo Chieregato; Alberto Soffientini; Claudio Pizzocaro; Giordano Savelli; Marco Galelli; Ugo Paolo Guerra
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6.  Preconditioned Alternating Projection Algorithms for Maximum a Posteriori ECT Reconstruction.

Authors:  Andrzej Krol; Si Li; Lixin Shen; Yuesheng Xu
Journal:  Inverse Probl       Date:  2012-11       Impact factor: 2.407

7.  Reduced isotope dose with rapid SPECT MPI imaging: initial experience with a CZT SPECT camera.

Authors:  W Lane Duvall; Lori B Croft; Tapan Godiwala; Eric Ginsberg; Titus George; Milena J Henzlova
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8.  Simultaneous measurement of noise and spatial resolution in PET phantom images.

Authors:  Martin A Lodge; Arman Rahmim; Richard L Wahl
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2010-01-28       Impact factor: 3.609

9.  Comparison of Lesion Detection and Quantification in MAP Reconstruction with Gaussian and Non-Gaussian Priors.

Authors:  Jinyi Qi
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10.  Effects of voxel size and iterative reconstruction parameters on the spatial resolution of 99mTc SPECT/CT.

Authors:  S Cheenu Kappadath
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2011-11-15       Impact factor: 2.102

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  3 in total

1.  Preconditioned alternating projection algorithm for solving the penalized-likelihood SPECT reconstruction problem.

Authors:  Si Li; Jiahan Zhang; Andrzej Krol; C Ross Schmidtlein; David Feiglin; Yuesheng Xu
Journal:  Phys Med       Date:  2017-05-09       Impact factor: 2.685

2.  Sparsity promoting regularization for effective noise suppression in SPECT image reconstruction.

Authors:  Wei Zheng; Si Li; Andrzej Krol; C Ross Schmidtlein; Xueying Zeng; Yuesheng Xu
Journal:  Inverse Probl       Date:  2019-10-04       Impact factor: 2.407

3.  Infimal convolution-based regularization for SPECT reconstruction.

Authors:  Jiahan Zhang; Si Li; Andrzej Krol; C Ross Schmidtlein; Edward Lipson; David Feiglin; Yuesheng Xu
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2018-10-25       Impact factor: 4.071

  3 in total

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