NeuroImage | 2021

Rapid high-quality PET Patlak parametric image generation based on direct reconstruction and temporal nonlocal neural network

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Parametric imaging based on dynamic positron emission tomography (PET) has wide applications in neurology. Compared to indirect methods, direct reconstruction methods, which reconstruct parametric images directly from the raw PET data, have superior image quality due to better noise modeling and richer information extracted from the PET raw data. For low-dose scenarios, the advantages of direct methods are more obvious. However, the wide adoption of direct reconstruction is inevitably impeded by the excessive computational demand and deficiency of the accessible raw data. In addition, motion modeling inside dynamic PET image reconstruction raises more computational challenges for direct reconstruction methods. In this work, we focused on the 18F-FDG Patlak model, and proposed a data-driven approach which can estimate the motion corrected full-dose direct Patlak images from the dynamic PET reconstruction series, based on a proposed novel temporal non-local convolutional neural network. During network training, direct reconstruction with motion correction based on full-dose dynamic PET sinograms was performed to obtain the training labels. The reconstructed full-dose /low-dose dynamic PET images were supplied as the network input. In addition, a temporal non-local block based on the dynamic PET images was proposed to better recover the structural information and reduce the image noise. During testing, the proposed network can directly output high-quality Patlak parametric images from the full-dose /low-dose dynamic PET images in seconds. Experiments based on 15 full-dose and 15 low-dose 18F-FDG brain datasets were conducted and analyzed to validate the feasibility of the proposed framework. Results show that the proposed framework can generate better image quality than reference methods.

Volume 240
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118380
Language English
Journal NeuroImage

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