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Dive into the research topics where Klaus Klingenbeck is active.

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Featured researches published by Klaus Klingenbeck.


Medical Physics | 2011

A general framework and review of scatter correction methods in x-ray cone-beam computerized tomography. Part 1: Scatter compensation approaches

Ernst-Peter Rührnschopf; Klaus Klingenbeck

Since scattered radiation in cone-beam volume CT implies severe degradation of CT images by quantification errors, artifacts, and noise increase, scatter suppression is one of the main issues related to image quality in CBCT imaging. The aim of this review is to structurize the variety of scatter suppression methods, to analyze the common structure, and to develop a general framework for scatter correction procedures. In general, scatter suppression combines hardware techniques of scatter rejection and software methods of scatter correction. The authors emphasize that scatter correction procedures consist of the main components scatter estimation (by measurement or mathematical modeling) and scatter compensation (deterministic or statistical methods). The framework comprises most scatter correction approaches and its validity also goes beyond transmission CT. Before the advent of cone-beam CT, a lot of papers on scatter correction approaches in x-ray radiography, mammography, emission tomography, and in Megavolt CT had been published. The opportunity to avail from research in those other fields of medical imaging has not yet been sufficiently exploited. Therefore additional references are included when ever it seems pertinent. Scatter estimation and scatter compensation are typically intertwined in iterative procedures. It makes sense to recognize iterative approaches in the light of the concept of self-consistency. The importance of incorporating scatter compensation approaches into a statistical framework for noise minimization has to be underscored. Signal and noise propagation analysis is presented. A main result is the preservation of differential-signal-to-noise-ratio (dSNR) in CT projection data by ideal scatter correction. The objective of scatter compensation methods is the restoration of quantitative accuracy and a balance between low-contrast restoration and noise reduction. In a synopsis section, the different deterministic and statistical methods are discussed with respect to their properties and applications. The current paper is focused on scatter compensation algorithms. The multitude of scatter estimation models will be dealt with in a separate paper.


Medical Physics | 2011

A general framework and review of scatter correction methods in cone beam CT. Part 2: Scatter estimation approaches

Ernst-Peter Ruehrnschopf and; Klaus Klingenbeck

The main components of scatter correction procedures are scatter estimation and a scatter compensation algorithm. This paper completes a previous paper where a general framework for scatter compensation was presented under the prerequisite that a scatter estimation method is already available. In the current paper, the authors give a systematic review of the variety of scatter estimation approaches. Scatter estimation methods are based on measurements, mathematical-physical models, or combinations of both. For completeness they present an overview of measurement-based methods, but the main topic is the theoretically more demanding models, as analytical, Monte-Carlo, and hybrid models. Further classifications are 3D image-based and 2D projection-based approaches. The authors present a system-theoretic framework, which allows to proceed top-down from a general 3D formulation, by successive approximations, to efficient 2D approaches. A widely useful method is the beam-scatter-kernel superposition approach. Together with the review of standard methods, the authors discuss their limitations and how to take into account the issues of object dependency, spatial variance, deformation of scatter kernels, external and internal absorbers. Open questions for further investigations are indicated. Finally, the authors refer on some special issues and applications, such as bow-tie filter, offset detector, truncated data, and dual-source CT.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2016

Comparison of Fractional Flow Reserve Based on Computational Fluid Dynamics Modeling Using Coronary Angiographic Vessel Morphology Versus Invasively Measured Fractional Flow Reserve

Monique Tröbs; Stephan Achenbach; Jens Röther; Thomas Redel; Michael Scheuering; David Winneberger; Klaus Klingenbeck; Lucian Mihai Itu; Tiziano Passerini; Ali Kamen; Puneet Sharma; Dorin Comaniciu; Christian Schlundt

Invasive fractional flow reserve (FFRinvasive), although gold standard to identify hemodynamically relevant coronary stenoses, is time consuming and potentially associated with complications. We developed and evaluated a new approach to determine lesion-specific FFR on the basis of coronary anatomy as visualized by invasive coronary angiography (FFRangio): 100 coronary lesions (50% to 90% diameter stenosis) in 73 patients (48 men, 25 women; mean age 67 ± 9 years) were studied. On the basis of coronary angiograms acquired at rest from 2 views at angulations at least 30° apart, a PC-based computational fluid dynamics modeling software used personalized boundary conditions determined from 3-dimensional reconstructed angiography, heart rate, and blood pressure to derive FFRangio. The results were compared with FFRinvasive. Interobserver variability was determined in a subset of 25 narrowings. Twenty-nine of 100 coronary lesions were hemodynamically significant (FFRinvasive ≤ 0.80). FFRangio identified these with an accuracy of 90%, sensitivity of 79%, specificity of 94%, positive predictive value of 85%, and negative predictive value of 92%. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.93. Correlation between FFRinvasive (mean: 0.84 ± 0.11) and FFRangio (mean: 0.85 ± 0.12) was r = 0.85. Interobserver variability of FFRangio was low, with a correlation of r = 0.88. In conclusion, estimation of coronary FFR with PC-based computational fluid dynamics modeling on the basis of lesion morphology as determined by invasive angiography is possible with high diagnostic accuracy compared to invasive measurements.


workshop on biomedical image registration | 2003

2D-3D Registration for Interventional Procedures: A Clinical Perspective

Klaus Klingenbeck

The clinical application of fluoroscopic imaging systems has undergone a drastic change from diagnostic procedures towards predominant use for real time control of interventions.


Archive | 1986

Method and apparatus for identifying the distribution of the dielectric constants in an object

Klaus Klingenbeck; Judith Regn


Archive | 1987

Method and apparatus for non-contacting identification of the temperature distribution in an examination subject

Klaus Klingenbeck; Rudolf Schittenhelm


Archive | 1991

Computer tomography apparatus with axially displaceable detector rows

Klaus Klingenbeck


Archive | 1987

Computer tomography apparatus

Klaus Klingenbeck; Arnulf Oppelt


Archive | 2011

Method and System for Intraoperative Guidance Using Physiological Image Fusion

Razvan Ioan Ionasec; Ingmar Voigt; Bogdan Georgescu; Yefeng Zheng; Jan Boese; Klaus Klingenbeck; Dorin Comaniciu


Archive | 2009

Method for representing interventional instruments in a 3D data set of an anatomy to be examined as well as a reproduction system for performing the method

Jan Boese; Klaus Klingenbeck

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