Abstract

Low-dose computer tomography (LDCT) has been widely used in medical diagnosis. Various denoising methods have been presented to remove noise in LDCT scans. However, existing methods cannot achieve satisfactory results due to the difficulties in (1) distinguishing the characteristics of structures, textures, and noise confused in the image domain, and (2) representing local details and global semantics in the hierarchical features. In this paper, we propose a novel denoising method consisting of (1) a 2D dual-domain restoration framework to reconstruct noise-free structure and texture signals separately, and (2) a 3D multi-depth reinforcement U-Net model to further recover image details with enhanced hierarchical features. In the 2D dual-domain restoration framework, the convolutional neural networks are adopted in both the image domain where the image structures are well preserved through the spatial continuity, and the sinogram domain where the textures and noise are separately represented by different wavelet coefficients and processed adaptively. In the 3D multi-depth reinforcement U-Net model, the hierarchical features from the 3D U-Net are enhanced by the cross-resolution attention module (CRAM) and dual-branch graph convolution module (DBGCM). The CRAM preserves local details by integrating adjacent low-level features with different resolutions, while the DBGCM enhances global semantics by building graphs for high-level features in intra-feature and inter-feature dimensions. Experimental results on the LUNA16 dataset and 2016 NIH-AAPM-Mayo Clinic LDCT Grand Challenge dataset illustrate the proposed method outperforms the state-of-the-art methods on removing noise from LDCT images with clear structures and textures, proving its potential in clinical practice.

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