| Literature DB >> 32240398 |
Abstract
Molecular imaging (MI) is a novel imaging discipline that has been continuously developed in recent years. It combines biochemistry, multimodal imaging, biomathematics, bioinformatics, cell & molecular physiology, biophysics, and pharmacology, and it provides a new technology platform for the early diagnosis and quantitative analysis of diseases, treatment monitoring and evaluation, and the development of comprehensive physiology. Fluorescence Molecular Tomography (FMT) is a type of optical imaging modality in MI that captures the three-dimensional distribution of fluorescence within a biological tissue generated by a specific molecule of fluorescent material within a biological tissue. Compared with other optical molecular imaging methods, FMT has the characteristics of high sensitivity, low cost, and safety and reliability. It has become the research frontier and research hotspot of optical molecular imaging technology. This paper took an overview of the recent methodology advances in FMT, mainly focused on the photon propagation model of FMT based on the radiative transfer equation (RTE), and the reconstruction problem solution consist of forward problem and inverse problem. We introduce the detailed technologies utilized in reconstruction of FMT. Finally, the challenges in FMT were discussed. This survey aims at summarizing current research hotspots in methodology of FMT, from which future research may benefit.Entities:
Keywords: Fluorescence molecular tomography; Forward problem; Image reconstruction; Inverse problem; Photon propagation model
Year: 2018 PMID: 32240398 PMCID: PMC7098398 DOI: 10.1186/s42492-018-0001-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vis Comput Ind Biomed Art ISSN: 2524-4442
Fig. 1Reconstruction of the in vivo experiment based on meshless method (MM) and finite element method (FEM). The first row and second row list the results of MM and FEM, respectively. The first and second columns list the 3-D visualization and cross-sectional of the reconstructed fluorescent sources. The third column lists the corresponding micro-CT cross-sectional image. The red square markers clarify the actual locations of the fluorescent bead. The figure is reproduced from [62]
Fig. 2Views of the reconstruction results using L2-norm regularization (Tikhonov), L1-norm regularization (L1-Iteration Shrinkage, L1-IS) and L1-norm regularization piecewise constant Level-Set (L1-PCLS) methods. The blue plane in the figure is the z = 6.4 mm slice from the mice. The red dot marks the real position of the fluorescent bead. The figure is reproduced from [98]
Fig. 3a Coronal and b transverse sections of the CT image of the mouse-shaped phantom showing the two embedded fluorescent line sources. c Coronal and d transverse overlay of CT and FMT images. e Coronal and f transverse sections of the FMT image showing the two fluorescent line sources reconstructed using both L1 and TV penalties with regularization parameters of 10 and 1, respectively. The figure is reproduced from [102]