Fully automated intrinsic respiratory and cardiac gating for small animal CT.

J Kuntz, J Dinkel, S Zwick, T Bäuerle, M Grasruck, F Kiessling, R Gupta, W Semmler, S H Bartling

Department of Medical Physics in Radiology, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany.

Journal Article: Physics in Medicine and Biology (impact factor: 2.78). 04/2010; 55(7):2069-85. DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/55/7/018

Abstract

A fully automated, intrinsic gating algorithm for small animal cone-beam CT is described and evaluated. A parameter representing the organ motion, derived from the raw projection images, is used for both cardiac and respiratory gating. The proposed algorithm makes it possible to reconstruct motion-corrected still images as well as to generate four-dimensional (4D) datasets representing the cardiac and pulmonary anatomy of free-breathing animals without the use of electrocardiogram (ECG) or respiratory sensors. Variation analysis of projections from several rotations is used to place a region of interest (ROI) on the diaphragm. The ROI is cranially extended to include the heart. The centre of mass (COM) variation within this ROI, the filtered frequency response and the local maxima are used to derive a binary motion-gating parameter for phase-sensitive gated reconstruction. This algorithm was implemented on a flat-panel-based cone-beam CT scanner and evaluated using a moving phantom and animal scans (seven rats and eight mice). Volumes were determined using a semiautomatic segmentation. In all cases robust gating signals could be obtained. The maximum volume error in phantom studies was less than 6%. By utilizing extrinsic gating via externally placed cardiac and respiratory sensors, the functional parameters (e.g. cardiac ejection fraction) and image quality were equivalent to this current gold standard. This algorithm obviates the necessity of both gating hardware and user interaction. The simplicity of the proposed algorithm enables adoption in a wide range of small animal cone-beam CT scanners.

Source: PubMed

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  • Researcher
    Please be aware that the cited dose measurements have been performed with a head phantom - therefore the true dose is by several factors higher!

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Keywords

binary motion-gating parameter
 
cardiac ejection fraction
 
cases robust gating signals
 
current gold standard
 
filtered frequency response
 
flat-panel-based cone-beam CT scanner
 
free-breathing animals
 
functional parameters
 
gating hardware
 
image quality
 
local maxima
 
maximum volume error
 
pulmonary anatomy
 
raw projection images
 
respiratory gating
 
respiratory sensors
 
small animal cone-beam CT
 
small animal cone-beam CT scanners
 
Volumes
 
wide range