Emergent Mind

Multi-Contrast CT Imaging with a Prototype Spatial-Spectral Filter

(2010.07840)
Published Oct 15, 2020 in physics.med-ph and eess.IV

Abstract

Spectral CT has great potential for a variety of clinical applications due to the improved material discrimination with respect to conventional CT. Many clinical and preclinical spectral CT systems have two spectral channels for dual-energy CT using strategies such as split-filtration, dual-layer detectors, or kVp-switching. However, there are emerging clinical imaging applications which would require three or more spectral sensitivity channels, for example, multiple exogenous contrast agents in a single scan. Spatial-spectral filters are a new spectral CT technology which use x-ray beam modulation to offer greater spectral diversity. The device consists of an array of k-edge filters which divide the x-ray beam into spectrally varied beamlets. This design allows for an arbitrary number of spectral channels; however, traditional two-step reconstruction-decomposition schemes are typically not effective because the measured data for any individual spectral channel is sparse in the projection domain. Instead, we use a one-step model-based material decomposition algorithm to iteratively estimate material density images directly from spectral CT data. In this work, we present a prototype spatial-spectral filter integrated with an x-ray CT test-bench. The filter is composed of an array of tin, erbium, tantalum, and lead filter tiles which spatially modulate the system spectral sensitivity pattern. After the system was characterized and modeled, we conducted a spectral CT scan of a multi-contrast-enhanced phantom containing water, iodine, and gadolinium solutions. We present the resulting spectral CT data as well as the material density images estimated by model-based material decomposition...

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