Photon-counting cine-cardiac CT in the mouse.

dc.contributor.author

Clark, Darin P

dc.contributor.author

Holbrook, Matthew

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Lee, Chang-Lung

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Badea, Cristian T

dc.contributor.editor

Roeder, Ryan K

dc.date.accessioned

2020-07-02T13:14:09Z

dc.date.available

2020-07-02T13:14:09Z

dc.date.issued

2019-01

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2020-07-02T13:14:06Z

dc.description.abstract

The maturation of photon-counting detector (PCD) technology promises to enhance routine CT imaging applications with high-fidelity spectral information. In this paper, we demonstrate the power of this synergy and our complementary reconstruction techniques, performing 4D, cardiac PCD-CT data acquisition and reconstruction in a mouse model of atherosclerosis, including calcified plaque. Specifically, in vivo cardiac micro-CT scans were performed in four ApoE knockout mice, following their development of calcified plaques. The scans were performed with a prototype PCD (DECTRIS, Ltd.) with 4 energy thresholds. Projections were sampled every 10 ms with a 10 ms exposure, allowing the reconstruction of 10 cardiac phases at each of 4 energies (40 total 3D volumes per mouse scan). Reconstruction was performed iteratively using the split Bregman method with constraints on spectral rank and spatio-temporal gradient sparsity. The reconstructed images represent the first in vivo, 4D PCD-CT data in a mouse model of atherosclerosis. Robust regularization during iterative reconstruction yields high-fidelity results: an 8-fold reduction in noise standard deviation for the highest energy threshold (relative to unregularized algebraic reconstruction), while absolute spectral bias measurements remain below 13 Hounsfield units across all energy thresholds and scans. Qualitatively, image domain material decomposition results show clear separation of iodinated contrast and soft tissue from calcified plaque in the in vivo data. Quantitatively, spatial, spectral, and temporal fidelity are verified through a water phantom scan and a realistic MOBY phantom simulation experiment: spatial resolution is robustly preserved by iterative reconstruction (10% MTF: 2.8-3.0 lp/mm), left-ventricle, cardiac functional metrics can be measured from iodine map segmentations with ~1% error, and small calcifications (615 μm) can be detected during slow moving phases of the cardiac cycle. Given these preliminary results, we believe that PCD technology will enhance dynamic CT imaging applications with high-fidelity spectral and material information.

dc.identifier

PONE-D-19-14774

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1932-6203

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1932-6203

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21142

dc.language

eng

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Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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PloS one

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10.1371/journal.pone.0218417

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Animals

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Mice, Knockout

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Mice

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Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted

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Tomography, X-Ray Computed

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Heart Function Tests

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Phantoms, Imaging

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Photons

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Female

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X-Ray Microtomography

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Four-Dimensional Computed Tomography

dc.title

Photon-counting cine-cardiac CT in the mouse.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Lee, Chang-Lung|0000-0002-0673-633X

duke.contributor.orcid

Badea, Cristian T|0000-0002-1850-2522

pubs.begin-page

e0218417

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9

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School of Medicine

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Biomedical Engineering

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Radiology

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Duke

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Pratt School of Engineering

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Institutes and Centers

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

14

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