Cardiac c-arm CT: A unified framework for motion estimation and dynamic CT

Prümmer M, Hornegger J, Lauritsch G, Wigstroem L, Girard-Hughes E, Fahrig R (2009)


Publication Type: Journal article, Original article

Publication year: 2009

Journal

Original Authors: Prümmer M., Hornegger J., Lauritsch G., Wigström L., Girard-Hughes E., Fahrig R.

Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Book Volume: 28

Pages Range: 1836-1849

Journal Issue: 11

DOI: 10.1109/TMI.2009.2025499

Abstract

Generating 3-D images of the heart during interventional procedures is a significant challenge. In addition to real time fluoroscopy, angiographic C-arm systems can also now be used to generate 3-D/4-D CT images on the same system. One protocol for cardiac CT uses ECG triggered multisweep scans. A 3-D volume of the heart at a particular cardiac phase is then reconstructed by applying Feldkamp (FDK) reconstruction to the projection images with retrospective ECG gating. In this work we introduce a unified framework for heart motion estimation and dynamic cone-beam reconstruction using motion corrections. The benefits of motion correction are 1) increased temporal and spatial resolution by removing cardiac motion which may still exist in the ECG gated data sets and 2) increased signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) by using more projection data than is used in standard ECG gated methods. Three signal-enhanced reconstruction methods are introduced that make use of all of the acquired projection data to generate a 3-D reconstruction of the desired cardiac phase. The first averages all motion corrected back-projections; the second and third perform a weighted averaging according to 1) intensity variations and 2) temporal distance relative to a time resolved and motion corrected reference FDK reconstruction. In a comparison study seven methods are compared: nongated FDK, ECG-gated FDK, ECG-gated, and motion corrected FDK, the three signal-enhanced approaches, and temporally aligned and averaged ECG-gated FDK reconstructions. The quality measures used for comparison are spatial resolution and SNR. Evaluation is performed using phantom data and animal models. We show that data driven and subject-specific motion estimation combined with motion correction can decrease motion-related blurring substantially. Furthermore, SNR can be increased by up to 70% while maintaining spatial resolution at the same level as is provided by the ECG-gated FDK. The presented framework provides excellent image quality for cardiac C-arm CT. © 2009 IEEE.

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How to cite

APA:

Prümmer, M., Hornegger, J., Lauritsch, G., Wigstroem, L., Girard-Hughes, E., & Fahrig, R. (2009). Cardiac c-arm CT: A unified framework for motion estimation and dynamic CT. IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 28(11), 1836-1849. https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TMI.2009.2025499

MLA:

Prümmer, Marcus, et al. "Cardiac c-arm CT: A unified framework for motion estimation and dynamic CT." IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging 28.11 (2009): 1836-1849.

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