Abstract

Limited-projection fluorescence molecular tomography (FMT) allows rapid reconstruction of the three-dimensional (3D) distribution of fluorescent targets within a shorter data acquisition time. However, the limited-projection FMT is severely ill-posed and ill-conditioned due to insufficient fluorescence measurements and the strong scattering properties of photons in biological tissues. Previously, regularization-based methods, combined with the sparse distribution of fluorescent sources, have been commonly used to alleviate the severe ill-posed nature of the limited-projection FMT. Due to the complex iterative computations, time-consuming solution procedures, and less stable reconstruction results, the limited-projection FMT remains an intractable challenge for achieving fast and accurate reconstructions. In this work, we completely discard the previous iterative solving-based reconstruction themes and propose multi-branch attention prior based parameterized generative adversarial network (MAP-PGAN) to achieve fast and accurate limited-projection FMT reconstruction. Firstly, the multi-branch attention can provide parameterized weighted sparse prior information for fluorescent sources, enabling MAP-PGAN to effectively mitigate the ill-posedness and significantly improve the reconstruction accuracy of limited-projection FMT. Secondly, since the end-to-end direct reconstruction strategy is adopted, the complex iterative computation process in traditional regularization algorithms can be avoided, thus greatly accelerating the 3D visualization process. The numerical simulation results show that the proposed MAP-PGAN method outperforms the state-of-the-art methods in terms of localization accuracy and morphological recovery. Meanwhile, the reconstruction time is only about 0.18s, which is about 100 to 1000 times faster than the conventional iteration-based regularization algorithms. The reconstruction results from the physical phantoms and in vivo experiments further demonstrate the feasibility and practicality of the MAP-PGAN method in achieving fast and accurate limited-projection FMT reconstruction.

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