Low-Dose X-ray CT Reconstruction Algorithm Using Shearlet Sparse Regularization

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 620-627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dayu Xiao ◽  
Xiaotong Zhang ◽  
Jianhua Li ◽  
Nan Bao ◽  
Yan Kang

Computed tomography (CT) scans produce ionizing radiation in the body, and high-dose CT scans may increase the risk of cancer. Therefore, reducing the CT radiation dose is particularly important in clinical diagnosis, which is achieved mainly by reducing projection views and tube current. However, the projection data are incomplete in the case of sparse views, which may cause stripe artifacts in the image reconstructed by the filtered back projection (FBP) algorithm, thereby losing the details of the image. Low current intensity also increases the noise of the projection data, degrading the quality of the reconstructed image. This study aimed to use the alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) to address the shearlet-based sparse regularization problem, which is subsequently referred to as ADMM-shearlet method. The low-dose projection data were simulated by adding Gaussian noise with zero mean to high-dose projection data. Then FBP, simultaneous algebraic reconstruction technique, total variation, and ADMM-shearlet methods were used to reconstruct images. Normalized mean square error, peak signal-to-noise ratio, and universal quality index were used to evaluate the performance of different reconstruction algorithms. Compared with the traditional reconstruction algorithms, the ADMM-shearlet algorithm performed well in suppressing the noise due to the low dose while maintaining the image details.

2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 829-847
Author(s):  
Hua Huang ◽  
Chengwu Lu ◽  
Lingli Zhang ◽  
Weiwei Wang

AbstractThe projection data obtained using the computed tomography (CT) technique are often incomplete and inconsistent owing to the radiation exposure and practical environment of the CT process, which may lead to a few-view reconstruction problem. Reconstructing an object from few projection views is often an ill-posed inverse problem. To solve such problems, regularization is an effective technique, in which the ill-posed problem is approximated considering a family of neighboring well-posed problems. In this study, we considered the {\ell_{1/2}} regularization to solve such ill-posed problems. Subsequently, the half thresholding algorithm was employed to solve the {\ell_{1/2}} regularization-based problem. The convergence analysis of the proposed method was performed, and the error bound between the reference image and reconstructed image was clarified. Finally, the stability of the proposed method was analyzed. The result of numerical experiments demonstrated that the proposed method can outperform the classical reconstruction algorithms in terms of noise suppression and preserving the details of the reconstructed image.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Babak Haghighi ◽  
Hannah Horng ◽  
Peter B Noël ◽  
Eric Cohen ◽  
Lauren Pantalone ◽  
...  

Abstract Rationale: High-throughput extraction of radiomic features from low-dose CT scans can characterize the heterogeneity of the lung parenchyma and potentially aid in identifying subpopulations that may have higher risk of lung diseases, such as COPD, and lung cancer due to inflammation or obstruction of the airways. We aim to determine the feasibility a lung radiomics phenotyping approach in a lung cancer screening cohort, while quantifying the effect of different CT reconstruction algorithms on phenotype robustness. Methods: We identified low-dose CT scans (n = 308) acquired with Siemens Healthineers scanners from patients who completed low-dose CT within our lung cancer screening program between 2015-2018 and had two different sets of image reconstructions kernel available (i.e., medium (I30f), sharp (I50f)) for the same acquisition. Following segmentation of the lung field, a total of 26 radiomic features were extracted from the entire 3D lung-field using a previously validated fully-automated lattice-based software pipeline, adapted for low-dose CT scans. The features extracted included gray-level histogram, co-occurrence, and run-length descriptors. Each feature was averaged for each scan within a range of lattice window sizes (W) ranging from 4-20mm. The extracted imaging features from both datasets were harmonized to correct for differences in image acquisition parameters. Subsequently, unsupervised hierarchal clustering was applied on the extracted features to identify distinct phenotypic patterns of the lung parenchyma, where consensus clustering was used to identify the optimal number of clusters (K = 2). Differences between? phenotypes for demographic and clinical covariates including sex, age, BMI, pack-years of smoking, Lung-RADS and cancer diagnosis were assessed for each phenotype cluster, and then compared across clusters for the two different CT reconstruction algorithms using the cluster entanglement metric, where a lower entanglement coefficient corresponds to good cluster alignment. Furthermore, an independent set of low-dose CT scans (n = 88) from patients with available pulmonary function data on lung obstruction were analyzed using the identified optimal clusters to assess associations to lung obstruction and validate the lung phenotyping paradigm. Results: Heatmaps generated by radiomic features identified two distinct lung parenchymal phenotype patterns across different feature extraction window sizes, for both reconstruction algorithms (P < 0.05 with K = 2). Associations of radiomic-based clusters with clinical covariates showed significant difference for BMI and pack-years of smoking (P < 0.05) for both reconstruction kernels. Radiomic phenotype patterns where similar across the two reconstructed kernels, specifically when smaller window sizes (W=4 and 8mm) were used for radiomic feature extraction, as deemed by their entanglement coefficient. Validation of clustering approaches using cluster mapping for the independent sample with lung obstruction also showed two statistically significant phenotypes (P < 0.05) with significant difference for BMI and smoking pack-years.ConclusionsRadiomic analysis can be used to characterize lung parenchymal phenotypes from low-dose CT scans, which appear reproducible for different reconstruction kernels. Further work should seek to evaluate the effect of additional CT acquisition parameters and validate these phenotypes in characterizing lung cancer screening populations, to potentially better stratify disease patterns and cancer risk.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lu-zhen Deng ◽  
Peng Feng ◽  
Mian-yi Chen ◽  
Peng He ◽  
Quang-sang Vo ◽  
...  

Compressive sensing (CS) theory has great potential for reconstructing CT images from sparse-views projection data. Currently, total variation (TV-) based CT reconstruction method is a hot research point in medical CT field, which uses the gradient operator as the sparse representation approach during the iteration process. However, the images reconstructed by this method often suffer the smoothing problem; to improve the quality of reconstructed images, this paper proposed a hybrid reconstruction method combining TV and non-aliasing Contourlet transform (NACT) and using the Split-Bregman method to solve the optimization problem. Finally, the simulation results show that the proposed algorithm can reconstruct high-quality CT images from few-views projection using less iteration numbers, which is more effective in suppressing noise and artefacts than algebraic reconstruction technique (ART) and TV-based reconstruction method.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 114-120
Author(s):  
Adinoyi Seriki Samuel

Desmodium adscendens is a rain forest medicinal herb used in managing quite a number of medical conditions. Its efficacy in the treatment of several diseases has made it a first line herb for doctors, especially in managing all forms of spasm. It is however common knowledge that some of these medicinal herbs impact severely on the normal functioning of some vital organs of the body during their administration. The present study was carried out to assess the renal and cardiovascular performance in subjects undergoing treatment with Desmodium adscendens with a view to advising against its indiscriminate use. The parameters used for the assessment of renal functions were serum creatinine and urea concentrations and their clearance. Also, changes in electrolyte concentration of Sodium, Potassium and Chloride concentration were used to assess cardiovascular performance. The histology of the kidney and heart tissues was also done to determine if the extract has impact on the cyto-architecture of the organs. Twenty-four (24) wistar rats were used for the experiment. The rats were grouped randomly into four groups (n = 6). Group 1 served as control, and the rats in the group were given normal rat feeds and water. Group 2 served as low dose group, and rats in this group were administered with low dose of extract 300 mg/kg. Group 3 served as medium group, and rats in this group were treated with medium dose of extract, 450 mg/kg. Group 4 served as high dose group, and rats in this group were treated with high dose of extract 600 mg/kg. The extract was administered for 28 days. Result showed that the extract did not impact negatively on the normal function of the renal and cardiovascular system of the treated groups, rather it enhanced their performances. It can therefore be concluded that the extract is beneficial to renal and cardiovascular functions if used within the treatment dosage.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (16) ◽  
pp. 3900
Author(s):  
Christine Hanu ◽  
Burk W. Loeliger ◽  
Irina V. Panyutin ◽  
Roberto Maass-Moreno ◽  
Paul Wakim ◽  
...  

We studied the effect of radiation from computed tomography (CT) scans on differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) into neuronal lineage. hESCs were divided into three radiation exposure groups: 0-dose, low-dose, or high-dose exposure. Low dose was accomplished with a single 15 mGy CT dose index (CTDI) CT scan that approximated the dose for abdominal/pelvic CT examinations in adults while the high dose was achieved with several consecutive CT scans yielding a cumulative dose of 500 mGy CTDI. The neural induction was characterized by immunocytochemistry. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) and Western blots were used to measure expression of the neuronal markers PAX6 and NES and pluripotency marker OCT4. We did not find any visible morphological differences between neural precursors from irradiated and non-irradiated cells. However, quantitative analyses of neuronal markers showed that PAX6 expression was reduced following exposure to the high dose compared to 0-dose controls, while no such decrease in PAX6 expression was observed following exposure to the low dose. Similarly, a statistically significant reduction in expression of NES was observed following high-dose exposure, while after low-dose exposure, a modest but statistically significant reduction in NES expression was only observed on Day 8 of differentiation. Further studies are warranted to elucidate how lower or delayed expression of PAX6 and NES can impact human fetal brain development.


Biologia ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian Qin ◽  
Rong Du ◽  
Yaqun Yang ◽  
Hongqiang Zhang ◽  
Ying Zhou

AbstractGlucocorticoids help animals respond to stressors but excessive glucocorticoids cause muscle atrophy, while insulin can promote anabolism and growth. In order to compare the glucocorticoids-induced ultrastructural changes between skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle, and investigate the preventive effects of insulin on the changes, eighteen male chicks with similar initial weight were randomly divided into three groups. The two test groups were respectively treated with high-dose dexamethasone alone or together with low-dose insulin by intraperitoneal injection, and the control group was treated with an equal volume of saline solution. The experiment lasted for ten days, and then the body weight, muscle size and ultrastructure in skeletal and cardiac muscles of twelve chicks were qualitatively or quantitatively analyzed. The results showed that high-dose dexamethasone induced obvious skeletal and cardiac muscle atrophy. The differences of ultrastructural changes between skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle (such as for the former or the latter, the intermyofibrillar-and-interfilamentary spaces reducing or enlarging, the mitochondria swelling seriously or enlarging lightly, the myofibril filaments compacting or loosing) suggested that dexamethasone induced skeletal and cardiac muscle atrophy by different mechanisms. Low-dose insulin did not affect the dexamethasone-induced decreases of body weight and skeletal muscle size, but alleviated lightly the dexamethasone-induced ultrastructural changes in skeletal muscle. Different from skeletal muscle, low-dose insulin almost resisted the dexamethasone-induced ultrastructural changes in cardiac muscle.


2017 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 369-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Igor Piotrowski ◽  
Katarzyna Kulcenty ◽  
Wiktoria Maria Suchorska ◽  
Agnieszka Skrobała ◽  
Małgorzata Skórska ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundAlthough the effects of high dose radiation on human cells and tissues are relatively well defined, there is no consensus regarding the effects of low and very low radiation doses on the organism. Ionizing radiation has been shown to induce gene mutations and chromosome aberrations which are known to be involved in the process of carcinogenesis. The induction of secondary cancers is a challenging long-term side effect in oncologic patients treated with radiation. Medical sources of radiation like intensity modulated radiotherapy used in cancer treatment and computed tomography used in diagnostics, deliver very low doses of radiation to large volumes of healthy tissue, which might contribute to increased cancer rates in long surviving patients and in the general population. Research shows that because of the phenomena characteristic for low dose radiation the risk of cancer induction from exposure of healthy tissues to low dose radiation can be greater than the risk calculated from linear no-threshold model. Epidemiological data collected from radiation workers and atomic bomb survivors confirms that exposure to low dose radiation can contribute to increased cancer risk and also that the risk might correlate with the age at exposure.ConclusionsUnderstanding the molecular mechanisms of response to low dose radiation is crucial for the proper evaluation of risks and benefits that stem from these exposures and should be considered in the radiotherapy treatment planning and in determining the allowed occupational exposures.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minhan Lou ◽  
Ling Yong ◽  
Weifeng Mao ◽  
Xiao Xiao ◽  
Chunlai Liang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Malathion has been wildly used in agriculture and household pest control for years and can affect human health through drinking water and dietary exposure. This study was to investigate the immunotoxicity of malathion (MLT)on BALA/c mice for the purpose of providing a scientific basis for pesticides registration management of MLT and other pesticides. Methods Female mice were randomly divided into five groups. Both the negative control and the positive control groups of mice were daily gavage with corn oil, and those in the positive control group were intraperitoneal injected with 200 mg/kg bw of cyclophosphamide (CY) 24 h before the end of the study. In the dosage groups, MLT were daily gavage at doses of 16, 65 and 258 mg/kg bw for 30 days, respectively. After exposure, the body weight, the absolute and relative weight of organs, the hematology and clinical chemistry parameters, the splenocyte number, the bone marrow cell classification, histopathology, as well as the cellular immunity, humoral immunity, and non-specific immunity functions of mice were studied. Comparisons between multiple groups were carried out by using one-way ANOVA followed by Bonferroni post hoc comparisons tests when equal variances assumed and Dunnett’s T3 post hoc tests when equal variances assumption was not met.ResultsCompared with the negative control group, the low dose of MLT significantly reduced the levels of IL-10, neutrophil, polychromatic erythroblast and monocyte series (P<0.05),induced atrophy in white pulp of spleen (1/10), which showed an immunosuppression in mice,and increased the absolute and relative weight of thymus (P<0.05). Inhibition of the PFC response, liver injury and thymus atrophy were observed in the high-dose group. What’s more, the IgG level was abnormally elevated with the increase of dose and presented a dose-response relation (P<0.05). ConclusionsThe immunotoxicity of low-dose of MLT is clear from the evidence and the LOAEL of MLT is preliminarily considered to be 16 mg/kg bw. It is much lower than that of the NOAEL (29 mg/kg bw) based on a 2-year chronic toxicity test and carcinogenicity test in rats, which was used to derive the ADI by Joint WHO/FAO Meeting on Pesticide Residues (0.3 mg/kg bw). It indicates that the immune system is a more sensitive target of MLT toxicity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 164-170
Author(s):  
Hawraa Hamed Naji ◽  
Oday Suliaman Khudhair ◽  
Amer Jebur Opyas ◽  
Firas Hussain Kadhim Albawi

Study was conducted to evaluate the effect of (Myrtus communis) oil on the weight of body and  some Hematological in the local male rabbits. (15) rabbits average (1078-1088 ) gram were divided to  (3) groups, every group  (5) rabbits, group (1) the control gives only (0.2) ml tap water orally, while group (2), (3) gives Myrtle oil  (0.1) ml/kg,(0.2) ml/kg respectively orally for (2) month.  We conducted that the administration of Myrtle oil produces a significance decrease (P˂0.01) at 0.1ml/Kg.B.W. and 0.2ml/Kg.B.W in the body weight, there is a significance increase (P˂ 0.05)  at 0.1ml/Kg.B.W.  in values of RBCs, WBCs, Hb and PCV,  there is a significance decrease (P<0.05) at 0.2ml/Kg.B.W. in values of RBCs,WBCs, Hb and PCV. While there is no significance) P˂ 0.05) in the value of PLT. We concluded that, the administration of Myrtle oil in low dose produces good effects whereas administration of it in high dose produce bad effects in the body functions.


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