Abstract

Radiation exposure computed tomography (CT) scans and the associated risk of cancer in patients have been major clinical concerns. Existing research can achieve low-dose CT imaging by reducing the X-ray current and the number of projections per rotation of the human body. However, this method may produce excessive noise and fringe artifacts in the traditional filtered back projection (FBP)-reconstructed image. To solve this problem, iterative image reconstruction is a promising option to obtain high-quality images from low-dose scans. This paper proposes a patch-based regularization method based on penalized weighted least squares total variation (PWLS-PR) for iterative image reconstruction. This method uses neighborhood patches instead of single pixels to calculate the nonquadratic penalty. The proposed regularization method is more robust than the conventional regularization method in identifying random fluctuations caused by sharp edges and noise. Each iteration of the proposed algorithm can be described in the following three steps: image updating via the total variation based on penalized weighted least squares (PWLS-TV), image smoothing, and pixel-by-pixel image fusion. Simulation and real-world projection experiments show that the proposed PWLS-PR algorithm achieves a higher image reconstruction performance than similar algorithms. Through the qualitative and quantitative evaluation of simulation experiments, the effectiveness of the method is also verified. Furthermore, this study shows that the PWLS-PR method reduces the amount of projection data required for repeated CT scans and has the useful potential to reduce the radiation dose in clinical medical applications.

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