Author
Listed:
- Shuqiong Wu
- Megumi Nakao
- Keiho Imanishi
- Mitsuhiro Nakamura
- Takashi Mizowaki
- Tetsuya Matsuda
Abstract
Large slice thickness or slice increment causes information insufficiency of Computed Tomography (CT) data in the longitudinal direction, which degrades the quality of CT-based diagnosis. Traditional approaches such as high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) and linear interpolation can solve this problem. However, HRCT suffers from dose increase, and linear interpolation causes artifacts. In this study, we propose a deep-learning-based approach to reconstruct densely sliced CT from sparsely sliced CT data without any dose increase. The proposed method reconstructs CT images from neighboring slices using a U-net architecture. To prevent multiple reconstructed slices from influencing one another, we propose a parallel architecture in which multiple U-net architectures work independently. Moreover, for a specific organ (i.e., the liver), we propose a range-clip technique to improve reconstruction quality, which enhances the learning of CT values within this organ by enlarging the range of the training data. CT data from 130 patients were collected, with 80% used for training and the remaining 20% used for testing. Experiments showed that our parallel U-net architecture reduced the mean absolute error of CT values in the reconstructed slices by 22.05%, and also reduced the incidence of artifacts around the boundaries of target organs, compared with linear interpolation. Further improvements of 15.12%, 11.04%, 10.94%, and 10.63% were achieved for the liver, left kidney, right kidney, and stomach, respectively, using the proposed range-clip algorithm. Also, we compared the proposed architecture with original U-net method, and the experimental results demonstrated the superiority of our approach.
Suggested Citation
Shuqiong Wu & Megumi Nakao & Keiho Imanishi & Mitsuhiro Nakamura & Takashi Mizowaki & Tetsuya Matsuda, 2022.
"Computed Tomography slice interpolation in the longitudinal direction based on deep learning techniques: To reduce slice thickness or slice increment without dose increase,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 17(12), pages 1-18, December.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0279005
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0279005
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