Abstract

Low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) helps to reduce radiation risks in CT scanning while maintaining image quality, which involves a consistent pursuit of lower incident rays and higher reconstruction performance. Although deep learning approaches have achieved encouraging success in LDCT reconstruction, most of them treat the task as a general inverse problem in either the image domain or the dual (sinogram and image) domains. Such frameworks have not considered the original noise generation of the projection data and suffer from limited performance improvement for the LDCT task. In this paper, we propose a novel reconstruction model based on noise-generating and imaging mechanism in full-domain, which fully considers the statistical properties of intrinsic noises in LDCT and prior information in sinogram and image domains. To solve the model, we propose an optimization algorithm based on the proximal gradient technique. Specifically, we derive the approximate solutions of the integer programming problem on the projection data theoretically. Instead of hand-crafting the sinogram and image regularizers, we propose to unroll the optimization algorithm to be a deep network. The network implicitly learns the proximal operators of sinogram and image regularizers with two deep neural networks, providing a more interpretable and effective reconstruction procedure. Numerical results demonstrate our proposed method improvements of > 2.9 dB in peak signal to noise ratio, > 1.4% promotion in structural similarity metric, and > 9 HU decrements in root mean square error over current state-of-the-art LDCT methods.

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