Abstract

Reducing the radiation exposure experienced by patients in total-body computed tomography (CT) imaging has attracted extensive attention in the medical imaging community. A low radiation dose may result in increased noise and artifacts that greatly affect the subsequent clinical diagnosis. To obtain high-quality total-body low-dose CT (LDCT) images, previous deep learning-based research works developed various network architectures. However, most of these methods only employ normal-dose CT (NDCT) images as ground truths to guide the training process of the constructed denoising network. As a result of this simple restriction, the reconstructed images tend to lose favorable image details and easily generate oversmoothed textures. This study explores how to better utilize the information contained in the feature spaces of NDCT images to guide the LDCT image reconstruction process and achieve high-qualityresults. We propose a novel intratask knowledge transfer (KT) method that leverages the knowledge distilled from NDCT images as an auxiliary component of the LDCT image reconstruction process. Our proposed architecture is named the teacher-student consistency network (TSC-Net), which consists of teacher and student networks with identical architectures. By employing the designed KT loss, the student network is encouraged to emulate the teacher network in the representation space and gain robust prior content. In addition, to further exploit the information contained in CT scans, a contrastive regularization mechanism (CRM) built upon contrastive learning is introduced. The CRM aims to minimize and maximize the L2 distances from the predicted CT images to the NDCT samples and to the LDCT samples in the latent space, respectively. Moreover, based on attention and the deformable convolution approach, we design a dynamic enhancement module (DEM) to improve the network capability to transform input informationflows. By conducting ablation studies, we prove the effectiveness of the proposed KT loss, CRM, and DEM. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that the TSC-Net outperforms the state-of-the-art methods in both quantitative and qualitative evaluations. Additionally, the excellent results obtained for clinical readings also prove that our proposed method can reconstruct high-quality CT images for clinicalapplications. Based on the experimental results and clinical readings, the TSC-Net has better performance than other approaches. In our future work, we may explore the reconstruction of LDCT images by fusing the positron emission tomography (PET) and CT modalities to further improve the visual quality of the reconstructed CTimages.

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