Abstract

.Significance: As a promising hybrid imaging technique with x-ray excitable nanophosphors, cone-beam x-ray luminescence computed tomography (CB-XLCT) has been proposed for in-depth biological imaging applications. In situations in which the full rotation of the imaging object (or x-ray source) is inapplicable, the x-ray excitation is limited by geometry, or a lower x-ray excitation dose is mandatory, limited view CB-XLCT reconstruction would be essential. However, this will result in severe ill-posedness and poor image quality.Aim: The aim is to develop a limited view CB-XLCT imaging strategy to reduce the scanning span and a corresponding reconstruction method to achieve robust imaging performance.Approach: In this study, a group sparsity-based reconstruction method is proposed with the consideration that nanophosphors usually cluster in certain regions, such as tumors or major organs such as the liver. In addition, depth compensation (DC) is adopted to avoid the depth inconsistency caused by a limited view strategy.Results: Experiments using numerical simulations and physical phantoms with different edge-to-edge distances were carried out to illustrate the validity of the proposed method. The reconstruction results showed that the proposed method outperforms conventional methods in terms of localization accuracy, target shape, image contrast, and spatial resolution with two perpendicular projections.Conclusions: A limited view CB-XLCT imaging strategy with two perpendicular projections and a reconstruction method based on DC and group sparsity, which is essential for fast CB-XLCT imaging and for some practical imaging applications, such as imaging-guided surgery, is proposed.

Highlights

  • X-ray luminescence computed tomography (XLCT) has attracted much attention as a CT/optical dual-mode imaging technique.[1,2,3] It utilizes x-ray excitable nanophosphors as biomarkers to produce visible or near-infrared (NIR) light upon x-ray irritation and naturally combines x-ray structure imaging of high resolution with optical molecular imaging of high sensitivity and specificity

  • Experiments using numerical simulations and physical phantoms with different edgeto-edge distances were carried out to illustrate the validity of the proposed method

  • A limited view cone-beam XLCT (CB-XLCT) imaging strategy with two perpendicular projections and a reconstruction method based on depth compensation (DC) and group sparsity, which is essential for fast CB-XLCT imaging and for some practical imaging applications, such as imaging-guided surgery, is proposed

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Summary

Introduction

X-ray luminescence computed tomography (XLCT) has attracted much attention as a CT/optical dual-mode imaging technique.[1,2,3] It utilizes x-ray excitable nanophosphors as biomarkers to produce visible or near-infrared (NIR) light upon x-ray irritation and naturally combines x-ray structure imaging of high resolution with optical molecular imaging of high sensitivity and specificity. Gao et al.: Limited view cone-beam x-ray luminescence tomography. Great efforts have been devoted to XLCT imaging and several types of XLCT systems have been proposed according to the x-ray beam shapes. Narrow-beam[2,3] and pencilbeam XLCT8,9 can achieve high spatial resolution, but the long imaging time hinders their application to fast biomedical applications. Cone-beam XLCT (CB-XLCT) systems[10,11,12,13] have been proposed for fast imaging to skip the translation step essential in narrowand pencil-beam XLCT systems

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