Abstract

Tomosynthesis is a technique that reconstructs a volume image from limited-angle projection data. In conventional tomosynthesis, the examination time is long, so it can be difficult for patients to hold their breath during certain examinations, such as chest imaging. Few-views tomosynthesis, which uses a linear arrangement of fixed X-ray tubes and enables an image to be obtained within 1 s, was found to be useful in the clinical setting in our previous study. In the present study, we attempted to develop a novel few-views tomosynthesis system that can obtain images with an improved image quality. A novel few-views arrangement of X-ray tubes was proposed and the image reconstruction method with regularization term was applied. The linear arrangement was used for the X-ray tube arrangement in our previous few-views tomosynthesis, in contrast, a circular arrangement was proposed in this study. The validation of this system was conducted with a numerical simulation and a real data experiment. The wider the scan angle, the more the object shadow spreads from "in-plane", allowing for artifact suppression. In the circular arrangement, the constant scan angle of θ is used, but in the linear arrangement the scan angle is set from 0 to θ. The artifacts in "out-of-plane" were more strongly suppressed in the circular arrangement than in the linear arrangement. Artifacts spreading in the z-direction were more strongly suppressed using the circular arrangement than the linear arrangement. Therefore, the circular arrangement was deemed appropriate for few-views tomosynthesis.

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