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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Non-Rigid Event-by-Event Continuous Respiratory Motion Compensated List-Mode Reconstruction for PET

TLDR
NR-EBE motion-compensated image reconstruction appears to be a promising tool for lesion detection and quantification when imaging thoracic and abdominal regions using PET.
Abstract
Respiratory motion during positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) imaging can cause significant image blurring and underestimation of tracer concentration for both static and dynamic studies. In this paper, with the aim to eliminate both intra-cycle and inter-cycle motions, and apply to dynamic imaging, we developed a non-rigid event-by-event (NR-EBE) respiratory motion-compensated list-mode reconstruction algorithm. The proposed method consists of two components: the first component estimates a continuous non-rigid motion field of the internal organs using the internal–external motion correlation. This continuous motion field is then incorporated into the second component, non-rigid MOLAR (NR-MOLAR) reconstruction algorithm to deform the system matrix to the reference location where the attenuation CT is acquired. The point spread function (PSF) and time-of-flight (TOF) kernels in NR-MOLAR are incorporated in the system matrix calculation, and therefore are also deformed according to motion. We first validated NR-MOLAR using a XCAT phantom with a simulated respiratory motion. NR-EBE motion-compensated image reconstruction using both the components was then validated on three human studies injected with 18F-FPDTBZ and one with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) tracers. The human results were compared with conventional non-rigid motion correction using discrete motion field (NR-discrete, one motion field per gate) and a previously proposed rigid EBE motion-compensated image reconstruction (R-EBE) that was designed to correct for rigid motion on a target lesion/organ. The XCAT results demonstrated that NR-MOLAR incorporating both PSF and TOF kernels effectively corrected for non-rigid motion. The 18F-FPDTBZ studies showed that NR-EBE out-performed NR-Discrete, and yielded comparable results with R-EBE on target organs while yielding superior image quality in other regions. The FDG study showed that NR-EBE clearly improved the visibility of multiple moving lesions in the liver where some of them could not be discerned in other reconstructions, in addition to improving quantification. These results show that NR-EBE motion-compensated image reconstruction appears to be a promising tool for lesion detection and quantification when imaging thoracic and abdominal regions using PET.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Respiratory Motion Compensation for PET/CT with Motion Information Derived from Matched Attenuation-Corrected Gated PET Data.

TL;DR: The proposed PET/CT respiratory event-by-event motion-correction framework with motion information derived from matched attenuation-corrected PET data provides image quality superior to that of the CTAC and NAC methods for multiple tracers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motion correction of respiratory-gated PET images using deep learning based image registration framework

TL;DR: A motion correction method for respiratory-gated PET images using deep learning based image registration framework that does not require the knowledge of the true deformation field for training the network, which makes it very convenient to implement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parametric Imaging With PET and SPECT

TL;DR: An overview of the pharmacokinetic parameters assessed in PET or SPECT studies is presented in this article, and the kinetic models that have been proposed to compute parametric images is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Data-driven voluntary body motion detection and non-rigid event-by-event correction for static and dynamic PET.

TL;DR: The proposed COD-based BMC approach successfully detected BMs and yielded superior correction results over conventional FIR approaches, and it is hypothesized that abrupt changes on the COD trace in lateral direction represent BMs.
Journal ArticleDOI

MDPET: A Unified Motion Correction and Denoising Adversarial Network for Low-Dose Gated PET

TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a Temporal Siamese Pyramid Network (TSP-Net) with basic units made up of 1.) siamese pyramid network and 2.) a recurrent layer for motion estimation among the gates.
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Effect of Respiratory Gating on Quantifying PET Images of Lung Cancer

TL;DR: It is shown that image smearing can be reduced by gating 18F-FDG PET images in synchronization with the respiratory motion and this technique allows a more accurate definition of the lesion volume and improves the quantitation specific activity of the tracer, which are distorted because of the breathing motion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Image Similarity and Tissue Overlaps as Surrogates for Image Registration Accuracy: Widely Used but Unreliable

TL;DR: It is concluded that tissue overlap and image similarity, whether used alone or together, do not provide valid evidence for accurate registrations and should thus not be reported or accepted as such.
Journal ArticleDOI

List-mode-based reconstruction for respiratory motion correction in PET using non-rigid body transformations

TL;DR: Results demonstrate that although both correction techniques considered lead to significant improvements in accounting for respiratory motion artefacts in the lung fields, the elastic-transformation-based correction leads to a more uniform improvement across the lungs for different lesion sizes and locations.
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