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Deep Learning Neural Network-based Sinogram Interpolation for Sparse-View CT Reconstruction

Computed Tomography (CT) finds applications across domains like medical diagnosis, security screening, and scientific research. In medical imaging, CT allows physicians to diagnose injuries and disease more quickly and accurately than other imaging techniques. However, CT is one of the most significant contributors of radiation dose to the general population and the required radiation dose for scanning could lead to cancer. On the other hand, a shallow radiation dose could sacrifice image quality causing misdiagnosis. To reduce the radiation dose, sparse-view CT, which includes capturing a smaller number of projections, becomes a promising alternative. However, the image reconstructed from linearly interpolated views possesses severe artifacts.

Recently, Deep Learning-based methods are increasingly being used to interpret the missing data by learning the nature of the image formation process. The current methods are promising but operate mostly in the image domain presumably due to lack of projection data. Another limitation is the use of simulated data with less sparsity (up to 75%). This research aims to interpolate the missing sparse-view CT in the sinogram domain using deep learning. To this end, a residual U-Net architecture has been trained with patch-wise projection data to minimize Euclidean distance between the ground truth and the interpolated sinogram. The model can generate highly sparse missing projection data. The results show improvement in SSIM and RMSE by 14% and 52% respectively with respect to the linear interpolation-based methods. Thus, experimental sparse-view CT data with 90% sparsity has been successfully interpolated while improving CT image quality. / Master of Science / Computed Tomography is a commonly used imaging technique due to the remarkable ability to visualize internal organs, bones, soft tissues, and blood vessels. It involves exposing the subject to X-ray radiation, which could lead to cancer. On the other hand, the radiation dose is critical for the image quality and subsequent diagnosis. Thus, image reconstruction using only a small number of projection data is an open research problem. Deep learning techniques have already revolutionized various Computer Vision applications. Here, we have used a method which fills missing highly sparse CT data. The results show that the deep learning-based method outperforms standard linear interpolation-based methods while improving the image quality.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/90182
Date14 June 2019
CreatorsVekhande, Swapnil Sudhir
ContributorsElectrical and Computer Engineering, Abbott, A. Lynn, Cao, Guohua, Huang, Jia-Bin
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatETD, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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