4.6 Article

Deep learning-based coronary artery motion estimation and compensation for short-scan cardiac CT

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 48, Issue 7, Pages 3559-3571

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mp.14927

Keywords

cardiac CT; deep learning; motion artifact correction; motion compensation; motion estimation

Funding

  1. Siemens Healthineers, Forchheim, Germany

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Deep PAMoCo is a method for estimating and compensating coronary artery motion, which uses a deep neural network to enhance computational performance and quality of motion-compensated reconstructions. The results demonstrate that Deep PAMoCo can effectively remove motion artifacts and improve the diagnostic value of cardiac CT scans, outperforming other approaches in terms of processing time and accuracy.
Purpose During a typical cardiac short scan, the heart can move several millimeters. As a result, the corresponding CT reconstructions may be corrupted by motion artifacts. Especially the assessment of small structures, such as the coronary arteries, is potentially impaired by the presence of these artifacts. In order to estimate and compensate for coronary artery motion, this manuscript proposes the deep partial angle-based motion compensation (Deep PAMoCo). Methods The basic principle of the Deep PAMoCo relies on the concept of partial angle reconstructions (PARs), that is, it divides the short scan data into several consecutive angular segments and reconstructs them separately. Subsequently, the PARs are deformed according to a motion vector field (MVF) such that they represent the same motion state and summed up to obtain the final motion-compensated reconstruction. However, in contrast to prior work that is based on the same principle, the Deep PAMoCo estimates and applies the MVF via a deep neural network to increase the computational performance as well as the quality of the motion compensated reconstructions. Results Using simulated data, it could be demonstrated that the Deep PAMoCo is able to remove almost all motion artifacts independent of the contrast, the radius and the motion amplitude of the coronary artery. In any case, the average error of the CT values along the coronary artery is about 25 HU while errors of up to 300 HU can be observed if no correction is applied. Similar results were obtained for clinical cardiac CT scans where the Deep PAMoCo clearly outperforms state-of-the-art coronary artery motion compensation approaches in terms of processing time as well as accuracy. Conclusions The Deep PAMoCo provides an efficient approach to increase the diagnostic value of cardiac CT scans even if they are highly corrupted by motion.

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