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Price: EUR 160.00Authors: Hussain, Dildar | Al-masni, Mohammed A. | Aslam, Muhammad | Sadeghi-Niaraki, Abolghasem | Hussain, Jamil | Gu, Yeong Hyeon | Naqvi, Rizwan Ali
Article Type: Review Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The emergence of deep learning (DL) techniques has revolutionized tumor detection and classification in medical imaging, with multimodal medical imaging (MMI) gaining recognition for its precision in diagnosis, treatment, and progression tracking. OBJECTIVE: This review comprehensively examines DL methods in transforming tumor detection and classification across MMI modalities, aiming to provide insights into advancements, limitations, and key challenges for further progress. METHODS: Systematic literature analysis identifies DL studies for tumor detection and classification, outlining methodologies including convolutional neural networks (CNNs), recurrent neural networks (RNNs), and their variants. Integration of multimodality imaging enhances …accuracy and robustness. RESULTS: Recent advancements in DL-based MMI evaluation methods are surveyed, focusing on tumor detection and classification tasks. Various DL approaches, including CNNs, YOLO, Siamese Networks, Fusion-Based Models, Attention-Based Models, and Generative Adversarial Networks, are discussed with emphasis on PET-MRI, PET-CT, and SPECT-CT. FUTURE DIRECTIONS: The review outlines emerging trends and future directions in DL-based tumor analysis, aiming to guide researchers and clinicians toward more effective diagnosis and prognosis. Continued innovation and collaboration are stressed in this rapidly evolving domain. CONCLUSION: Conclusions drawn from literature analysis underscore the efficacy of DL approaches in tumor detection and classification, highlighting their potential to address challenges in MMI analysis and their implications for clinical practice. Show more
Keywords: Multimodal medical image, deep learning, MRI, CT, PET, fusion, segmentation, image analysis, deep learning, GANs
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230429
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 857-911, 2024
Authors: Vaikunta Pai, T. | Maithili, K. | Arun Kumar, Ravula | Nagaraju, D. | Anuradha, D. | Kumar, Shailendra | Ravuri, Ananda | Sunilkumar Reddy, T. | Sivaram, M. | Vidhya, R.G.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: An efficient deep convolutional neural network (DeepCNN) is proposed in this article for the classification of Covid-19 disease. OBJECTIVE: A novel structure known as the Pointwise-Temporal-pointwise convolution unit is developed incorporated with the varying kernel-based depth wise temporal convolution before and after the pointwise convolution operations. METHODS: The outcome is optimized by the Slap Swarm algorithm (SSA). The proposed Deep CNN is composed of depth wise temporal convolution and end-to-end automatic detection of disease. First, the datasets SARS-COV-2 Ct-Scan Dataset and CT scan COVID Prediction dataset are preprocessed using the min-max approach and the features …are extracted for further processing. RESULTS: The experimental analysis is conducted between the proposed and some state-of-art works and stated that the proposed work effectively classifies the disease than the other approaches. CONCLUSION: The proposed structural unit is used to design the deep CNN with the increasing kernel sizes. The classification process is improved by the inclusion of depth wise temporal convolutions along with the kernel variation. The computational complexity is reduced by the introduction of stride convolutions are used in the residual linkage among the adjacent structural units. Show more
Keywords: Deep CNN, temporal, structural unit, depth wise temporal, pointwise
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230424
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 913-930, 2024
Authors: Jiang, Zhongchuan | Wu, Yun | Huang, Lei | Gu, Maohua
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The rapid development of deep learning techniques has greatly improved the performance of medical image segmentation, and medical image segmentation networks based on convolutional neural networks and Transformer have been widely used in this field. However, due to the limitation of the restricted receptive field of convolutional operation and the lack of local fine information extraction ability of the self-attention mechanism in Transformer, the current neural networks with pure convolutional or Transformer structure as the backbone still perform poorly in medical image segmentation. METHODS: In this paper, we propose FDB-Net (Fusion Double Branch Network, FDB-Net), a double …branch medical image segmentation network combining CNN and Transformer, by using a CNN containing g n Conv blocks and a Transformer containing Varied-Size Window Attention (VWA) blocks as the feature extraction backbone network, the dual-path encoder ensures that the network has a global receptive field as well as access to the target local detail features. We also propose a new feature fusion module (Deep Feature Fusion, DFF), which helps the image to simultaneously fuse features from two different structural encoders during the encoding process, ensuring the effective fusion of global and local information of the image. CONCLUSION: Our model achieves advanced results in all three typical tasks of medical image segmentation, which fully validates the effectiveness of FDB-Net. Show more
Keywords: Medical image processing, dual-branch network, convolutional neural networks, transformer, feature fusion
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230413
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 931-951, 2024
Authors: Ma, Yuqi | He, Jingliu | Tan, Duo | Han, Xu | Feng, Ruiqi | Xiong, Hailing | Peng, Xihua | Pu, Xun | Zhang, Lin | Li, Yongmei | Chen, Shanxiong
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The Chinese population ranks among the highest globally in terms of stroke prevalence. In the clinical diagnostic process, radiologists utilize computed tomography angiography (CTA) images for diagnosis, enabling a precise assessment of collateral circulation in the brains of stroke patients. Recent studies frequently combine imaging and machine learning methods to develop computer-aided diagnostic algorithms. However, in studies concerning collateral circulation assessment, the extracted imaging features are primarily composed of manually designed statistical features, which exhibit significant limitations in their representational capacity. Accurately assessing collateral circulation using image features in brain CTA images still presents challenges. METHODS: To …tackle this issue, considering the scarcity of publicly accessible medical datasets, we combined clinical data with imaging data to establish a dataset named RadiomicsClinicCTA. Moreover, we devised two collateral circulation assessment models to exploit the synergistic potential of patients’ clinical information and imaging data for a more accurate assessment of collateral circulation: data-level fusion and feature-level fusion. To remove redundant features from the dataset, we employed Levene’s test and T -test methods for feature pre-screening. Subsequently, we performed feature dimensionality reduction using the LASSO and random forest algorithms and trained classification models with various machine learning algorithms on the data-level fusion dataset after feature engineering. RESULTS: Experimental results on the RadiomicsClinicCTA dataset demonstrate that the optimized data-level fusion model achieves an accuracy and AUC value exceeding 86%. Subsequently, we trained and assessed the performance of the feature-level fusion classification model. The results indicate the feature-level fusion classification model outperforms the optimized data-level fusion model. Comparative experiments show that the fused dataset better differentiates between good and bad side branch features relative to the pure radiomics dataset. CONCLUSIONS: Our study underscores the efficacy of integrating clinical and imaging data through fusion models, significantly enhancing the accuracy of collateral circulation assessment in stroke patients. Show more
Keywords: Radiomics, computer-aided diagnosis, fusion model, collateral circulation assessment, machine learning
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240083
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 953-971, 2024
Authors: Xu, Bu | Yang, Jinzhong | Hong, Peng | Fan, Xiaoxue | Sun, Yu | Zhang, Libo | Yang, Benqiang | Xu, Lisheng | Avolio, Alberto
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Coronary artery segmentation is a prerequisite in computer-aided diagnosis of Coronary Artery Disease (CAD). However, segmentation of coronary arteries in Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography (CCTA) images faces several challenges. The current segmentation approaches are unable to effectively address these challenges and existing problems such as the need for manual interaction or low segmentation accuracy. OBJECTIVE: A Multi-scale Feature Learning and Rectification (MFLR) network is proposed to tackle the challenges and achieve automatic and accurate segmentation of coronary arteries. METHODS: The MFLR network introduces a multi-scale feature extraction module in the encoder to effectively capture contextual …information under different receptive fields. In the decoder, a feature correction and fusion module is proposed, which employs high-level features containing multi-scale information to correct and guide low-level features, achieving fusion between the two-level features to further improve segmentation performance. RESULTS: The MFLR network achieved the best performance on the dice similarity coefficient, Jaccard index, Recall, F1-score, and 95% Hausdorff distance, for both in-house and public datasets. CONCLUSION: Experimental results demonstrate the superiority and good generalization ability of the MFLR approach. This study contributes to the accurate diagnosis and treatment of CAD, and it also informs other segmentation applications in medicine. Show more
Keywords: Coronary artery segmentation, CCTA, multi-scale feature, feature fusion, feature correction
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240093
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 973-991, 2024
Authors: Zhao, Chen | Song, Jianping | Yuan, Yifan | Chu, Ying-Hua | Hsu, Yi-Cheng | Huang, Qiu
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Accurate volumetric segmentation of primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) is essential for assessing and monitoring the tumor before radiotherapy and the treatment planning. The tedious manual segmentation leads to interindividual and intraindividual differences, while existing automatic segmentation methods cause under-segmentation of PCNSL due to the complex and multifaceted nature of the tumor. OBJECTIVE: To address the challenges of small size, diffused distribution, poor inter-layer continuity on the same axis, and tendency for over-segmentation in brain MRI PCNSL segmentation, we propose an improved attention module based on nnUNet for automated segmentation. METHODS: …We collected 114 T1 MRI images of patients in the Huashan Hospital, Shanghai. Then randomly split the total of 114 cases into 5 distinct training and test sets for a 5-fold cross-validation. To efficiently and accurately delineate the PCNSL, we proposed an improved attention module based on nnU-Net with 3D convolutions, batch normalization, and residual attention (res-attention) to learn the tumor region information. Additionally, multi-scale dilated convolution kernels with different dilation rates were integrated to broaden the receptive field. We further used attentional feature fusion with 3D convolutions (AFF3D) to fuse the feature maps generated by multi-scale dilated convolution kernels to reduce under-segmentation. RESULTS: Compared to existing methods, our attention module improves the ability to distinguish diffuse and edge enhanced types of tumors; and the broadened receptive field captures tumor features of various scales and shapes more effectively, achieving a 0.9349 Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC). CONCLUSIONS: Quantitative results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method in segmenting the PCNSL. To our knowledge, this is the first study to introduce attention modules into deep learning for segmenting PCNSL based on brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), promoting the localization of PCNSL before radiotherapy. Show more
Keywords: Primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL), convolutional neural network (CNN), attention, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), segmentation
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240016
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 993-1009, 2024
Authors: Vishnu Priyan, S. | Vinod Kumar, R. | Moorthy, C. | Nishok, V.S.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Retinal disorders pose a serious threat to world healthcare because they frequently result in visual loss or impairment. For retinal disorders to be diagnosed precisely, treated individually, and detected early, deep learning is a necessary subset of artificial intelligence. This paper provides a complete approach to improve the accuracy and reliability of retinal disease identification using images from OCT (Retinal Optical Coherence Tomography). The Hybrid Model GIGT, which combines Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs), Inception, and Game Theory, is a novel method for diagnosing retinal diseases using OCT pictures. This technique, which is carried out in Python, includes preprocessing images, feature …extraction, GAN classification, and a game-theoretic examination. Resizing, grayscale conversion, noise reduction using Gaussian filters, contrast enhancement using Contrast Limiting Adaptive Histogram Equalization (CLAHE), and edge recognition via the Canny technique are all part of the picture preparation step. These procedures set up the OCT pictures for efficient analysis. The Inception model is used for feature extraction, which enables the extraction of discriminative characteristics from the previously processed pictures. GANs are used for classification, which improves accuracy and resilience by adding a strategic and dynamic aspect to the diagnostic process. Additionally, a game-theoretic analysis is utilized to evaluate the security and dependability of the model in the face of hostile attacks. Strategic analysis and deep learning work together to provide a potent diagnostic tool. This suggested model’s remarkable 98.2% accuracy rate shows how this method has the potential to improve the detection of retinal diseases, improve patient outcomes, and address the worldwide issue of visual impairment. Show more
Keywords: Retinal disease detection, optical coherence tomography, hybrid GIGT model, Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs), inception, game theory, contrast limited adaptive histogram equalization, canny edge detection
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240027
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1011-1039, 2024
Authors: Udayakumar, P. | Subhashini, R.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Connectome is understanding the complex organization of the human brain’s structural and functional connectivity is essential for gaining insights into cognitive processes and disorders. OBJECTIVE: To improve the prediction accuracy of brain disorder issues, the current study investigates dysconnected subnetworks and graph structures associated with schizophrenia. METHOD: By using the proposed structural connectivity-deep graph neural network (sc-DGNN) model and compared with machine learning (ML) and deep learning (DL) models.This work attempts to focus on eighty-eight subjects of diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI), three classical ML, and five DL models. RESULT: The structural connectivity-deep …graph neural network (sc-DGNN) model is proposed to effectively predict dysconnectedness associated with schizophrenia and exhibits superior performance compared to traditional ML and DL (GNNs) methods in terms of accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, precision, F1-score, and Area under receiver operating characteristic (AUC). CONCLUSION: The classification task on schizophrenia using structural connectivity matrices and experimental results showed that linear discriminant analysis (LDA) performed 72% accuracy rate in ML models and sc-DGNN performed at a 93% accuracy rate in DL models to distinguish between schizophrenia and healthy patients. Show more
Keywords: Connectome, brain disorder, neural network, graph measure, connectivity matrices, neuroimaging, tau protein
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230426
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1041-1059, 2024
Authors: Zhao, Wei | Liu, Yi | Linghu, Xinyao | Zhang, Pengcheng | Yan, Hongxu | Ding, Xiaxu | Wang, Xiang | Gui, Zhiguo | Chen, Yan
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Recently, X-rays have been widely used to detect complex structural workpieces. Due to the uneven thickness of the workpiece and the high dynamic range of the X-ray image itself, the detailed internal structure of the workpiece cannot be clearly displayed. OBJECTIVE: To solve this problem, we propose an image enhancement algorithm based on a multi-scale local edge-preserving filter. METHODS: Firstly, the global brightness of the image is enhanced through logarithmic transformation. Then, to enhance the local contrast, we propose utilizing the gradient decay function based on fuzzy entropy to process the gradient and then incorporate …the gradient into the energy function of the local edge-preserving filter (LEP) as a constraint term. Finally, multiple base layers and detail layers are obtained through filtering multi-scale decomposition. All detail layers are enhanced and fused using S-curve mapping to improve contrast further. RESULTS: This method is competitive in both quantitative indices and visual perception quality. CONCLUSIONS: The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method significantly enhances various complex workpieces and is highly efficient. Show more
Keywords: X-ray images, local edge-preserving filter, local fuzzy entropy, gradient domain compression, S-curve mapping
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240045
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1061-1077, 2024
Authors: Shi, Liu | Wei, Cunfeng | Jia, Tong | Zhao, Yunsong | Liu, Baodong
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The rapid development of industrialization in printed circuit board (PCB) warrants more complexity and integrity, which entails an essential procedure of PCB inspection. X-ray computed laminography (CL) enables inspection of arbitrary regions for large-sized flat objects with high resolution. PCB inspection based on CL imaging is worthy of exploration. OBJECTIVE: This work aims to extract PCB circuit layer information based on CL imaging through image segmentation technique. METHODS: In this work, an effective and applicable segmentation model for PCB CL images is established for the first time. The model comprises two components, …with one integrating edge diffusion and l 0 smoothing to filter CL images with aliasing artifacts, and the other being the fuzzy energy-based active contour model driven by local pre-fitting energy to segment the filtered images. RESULT: The proposed model is able to suppress aliasing artifacts in the PCB CL images and has good performance on images of different circuit layers. CONCLUSIONS: Results of the simulation experiment reveal that the method is capable of accurate segmentation under ideal scanning condition. Testing of different PCBs and comparison of different segmentation methods authenticate the applicability and superiority of the model. Show more
Keywords: PCB, CL, image segmentation, active contour model
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240006
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1079-1098, 2024
Authors: Andriiashen, Vladyslav | van Liere, Robert | van Leeuwen, Tristan | Batenburg, Kees Joost
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: X-ray imaging is widely used for the non-destructive detection of defects in industrial products on a conveyor belt. In-line detection requires highly accurate, robust, and fast algorithms. Deep Convolutional Neural Networks (DCNNs) satisfy these requirements when a large amount of labeled data is available. To overcome the challenge of collecting these data, different methods of X-ray image generation are considered. OBJECTIVE: Depending on the desired degree of similarity to real data, different physical effects should either be simulated or can be ignored. X-ray scattering is known to be computationally expensive to simulate, and this effect …can greatly affect the accuracy of a generated X-ray image. We aim to quantitatively evaluate the effect of scattering on defect detection. METHODS: Monte-Carlo simulation is used to generate X-ray scattering distribution. DCNNs are trained on the data with and without scattering and applied to the same test datasets. Probability of Detection (POD) curves are computed to compare their performance, characterized by the size of the smallest detectable defect. RESULTS: We apply the methodology to a model problem of defect detection in cylinders. When trained on data without scattering, DCNNs reliably detect defects larger than 1.3 mm, and using data with scattering improves performance by less than 5%. If the analysis is performed on the cases with large scattering-to-primary ratio (1 < SPR < 5), the difference in performance could reach 15% (approx. 0.4 mm). CONCLUSION: Excluding the scattering signal from the training data has the largest effect on the smallest detectable defects, and the difference decreases for larger defects. The scattering-to-primary ratio has a significant effect on detection performance and the required accuracy of data generation. Show more
Keywords: X-ray imaging, X-ray data generation, X-ray scattering, deep learning, in-line inspection
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230389
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1099-1119, 2024
Authors: Ali, Sajid | Ho, Chien-Yi | Yang, Chen-Chia | Chou, Szu-Hsien | Chen, Zhen-Ye | Huang, Wei-Chien | Shih, Tzu-Ching
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Cardiovascular disease (CVD), a global health concern, particularly coronary artery disease (CAD), poses a significant threat to well-being. Seeking safer and cost-effective diagnostic alternatives to invasive coronary angiography, noninvasive coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) gains prominence. This study employed OpenFOAM, an open-source Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) software, to analyze hemodynamic parameters in coronary arteries with serial stenoses. Patient-specific three-dimensional (3D) models from CCTA images offer insights into hemodynamic changes. OpenFOAM breaks away from traditional commercial software, validated against the FDA benchmark nozzle model for reliability. Applying this refined methodology to seventeen coronary arteries across nine patients, the study evaluates parameters …like fractional flow reserve computed tomography simulation (FFRCTS ), fluid velocity, and wall shear stress (WSS) over time. Findings include FFRCTS values exceeding 0.8 for grade 0 stenosis and falling below 0.5 for grade 5 stenosis. Central velocity remains nearly constant for grade 1 stenosis but increases 3.4-fold for grade 5 stenosis. This research innovates by utilizing OpenFOAM, departing from previous reliance on commercial software. Combining qualitative stenosis grading with quantitative FFRCTS and velocity measurements offers a more comprehensive assessment of coronary artery conditions. The study introduces 3D renderings of wall shear stress distribution across stenosis grades, providing an intuitive visualization of hemodynamic changes for valuable insights into coronary stenosis diagnosis. Show more
Keywords: Computational fluid dynamics (CFD), coronary computed tomography angiography, food and drug administration (FDA) benchmark nozzle model, fractional flow reserve (FFR)
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230239
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1121-1136, 2024
Authors: Chen, Gang | Zhang, Zehuan | Xu, Shuo | Jiang, Shibo | Liu, Ximing | Tang, Peng | Li, Songyuan | Xiang, Xincheng
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The polychromatic X-rays generated by a linear accelerator (Linac) often result in noticeable hardening artifacts in images, posing a significant challenge to accurate defect identification. To address this issue, a simple yet effective approach is to introduce filters at the radiation source outlet. However, current methods are often empirical, lacking scientifically sound metrics. OBJECTIVE: This study introduces an innovative filter design method that optimizes filter performance by balancing the impact of ray intensity and energy on image quality. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Firstly, different spectra under various materials and thicknesses of filters were obtained using GEometry …ANd Tracking (Geant4) simulation. Subsequently, these spectra and their corresponding incident photon counts were used as input sources to generate different reconstructed images. By comprehensively comparing the intensity differences and noise in images of defective and non-defective regions, along with considering hardening indicators, the optimal filter was determined. RESULTS: The optimized filter was applied to a Linac-based X-ray computed tomography (CT) detection system designed for identifying defects in graphite materials within high-temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTR), with defect dimensions of 2 mm. After adding the filter, the hardening effect reduced by 22%, and the Defect Contrast Index (DCI) reached 3.226. CONCLUSION: The filter designed based on the parameters of Average Difference (AD) and Defect Contrast Index (DCI) can effectively improve the quality of defect images. Show more
Keywords: Linear accelerator, hardening artifacts, defect identification, filter design
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240032
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1137-1150, 2024
Authors: Watanabe, Haruyuki | Ezawa, Yuina | Matsuyama, Eri | Kondo, Yohan | Hayashi, Norio | Maruyama, Sho | Ogura, Toshihiro | Shimosegawa, Masayuki
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Radiography plays an important role in medical care, and accurate positioning is essential for providing optimal quality images. Radiographs with insufficient diagnostic value are rejected, and retakes are required. However, determining the suitability of retaking radiographs is a qualitative evaluation. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate skull radiograph accuracy automatically using an unsupervised learning-based autoencoder (AE) and a variational autoencoder (VAE). In this study, we eliminated visual qualitative evaluation and used unsupervised learning to identify skull radiography retakes from the quantitative evaluation. METHODS: Five skull phantoms were imaged on radiographs, and 1,680 images were acquired. These images correspond …to two categories: normal images captured at appropriate positions and images captured at inappropriate positions. This study verified the discriminatory ability of skull radiographs using anomaly detection methods. RESULTS: The areas under the curves for AE and VAE were 0.7060 and 0.6707, respectively, in receiver operating characteristic analysis. Our proposed method showed a higher discrimination ability than those of previous studies which had an accuracy of 52%. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that the proposed method has high classification accuracy in determining the suitability of retaking skull radiographs. Automation of optimal image consideration, whether or not to retake radiographs, contributes to improving operational efficiency in busy X-ray imaging operations. Show more
Keywords: Anomaly detection, unsupervised learning, autoencoder, variational autoencoder, skull radiograph
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230431
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1151-1162, 2024
Authors: Gobo, M.S.S. | Balbin, D.R. | Hönnicke, M.G. | Poletti, M.E.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Typical propagation-based X-ray phase contrast imaging (PB-PCI) experiments using polyenergetic sources are tested in very ideal conditions: low-energy spectrum (mainly characteristic X-rays), small thickness and homogeneous materials considered weakly absorbing objects, large object-to-detector distance, long exposure times and non-clinical detector. OBJECTIVE: Explore PB-PCI features using boundary conditions imposed by a low power polychromatic X-ray source (X-ray spectrum without characteristic X-rays), thick and heterogenous materials and a small area imaging detector with high low-detection radiation threshold, elements commonly found in a clinical scenario. METHODS: A PB-PCI setup implemented using a microfocus X-ray source and a dental …imaging detector was characterized in terms of different spectra and geometric parameters on the acquired images. Test phantoms containing fibers and homogeneous materials with close attenuation characteristics and animal bone and mixed soft tissues (bio-sample models) were analyzed. Contrast to Noise Ratio (CNR), system spatial resolution and Kerma values were obtained for all images. RESULTS: Phase contrast images showed CNR up to 15% higher than conventional contact images. Moreover, it is better seen when large magnifications (>3) and object-to-detector distances (>13 cm) were used. The influence of the spectrum was not appreciable due to the low efficiency of the detector (thin scintillator screen) at high energies. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the clinical boundary condition used in this work, regarding the X-ray spectrum, thick samples, and detection system, it was possible to acquire phase contrast images of biological samples. Show more
Keywords: Phase contrast imaging, propagation-based, edge-enhancement, optimization, digital dental detector, clinical application
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230425
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1163-1175, 2024
Authors: Lin, Yu-Fang | Hsieh, Chen-Hsi | Tien, Hui-Ju | Lee, Yi-Huan | Chen, Yi-Chun | Lai, Lu-Han | Hsu, Shih-Ming | Shueng, Pei-Wei
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The inherent problems in the existence of electron equilibrium and steep dose fall-off pose difficulties for small- and narrow-field dosimetry. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the cutout factors for keloid electron radiotherapy using various dosimetry detectors for small and narrow fields. METHOD: The measurements were performed in a solid water phantom with nine different cutout shapes. Five dosimetry detectors were used in the study: pinpoint 3D ionization chamber, Farmer chamber, semiflex chamber, Classic Markus parallel plate chamber, and EBT3 film. RESULTS: The results demonstrated good agreement between the semiflex and pinpoint chambers. Furthermore, there was …no difference between the Farmer and pinpoint chambers for large cutouts. For the EBT3 film, half of the cases had differences greater than 1%, and the maximum discrepancy compared with the reference chamber was greater than 2% for the narrow field. CONCLUSION: The parallel plate, semiflex chamber and EBT3 film are suitable dosimeters that are comparable with pinpoint 3D chambers in small and narrow electron fields. Notably, a semiflex chamber could be an alternative option to a pinpoint 3D chamber for cutout widths≥3 cm. It is very important to perform patient-specific cutout factor calibration with an appropriate dosimeter for keloid radiotherapy. Show more
Keywords: Cutout factor, electron beam, dosimetry detector, narrow field, keloid
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240059
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1177-1184, 2024
Authors: Shao, Wencheng | Lin, Xin | Huang, Ying | Qu, Liangyong | Zhuo, Weihai | Liu, Haikuan
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: PURPOSE: This study aims to propose and develop a fast, accurate, and robust prediction method of patient-specific organ doses from CT examinations using minimized computational resources. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We randomly selected the image data of 723 patients who underwent thoracic CT examinations. We performed auto-segmentation based on the selected data to generate the regions of interest (ROIs) of thoracic organs using the DeepViewer software. For each patient, radiomics features of the thoracic ROIs were extracted via the Pyradiomics package. The support vector regression (SVR) model was trained based on the radiomics features and reference organ …dose obtained by Monte Carlo (MC) simulation. The root mean squared error (RMSE), mean absolute percentage error (MAPE), and coefficient of determination (R-squared) were evaluated. The robustness was verified by randomly assigning patients to the train and test sets of data and comparing regression metrics of different patient assignments. RESULTS: For the right lung, left lung, lungs, esophagus, heart, and trachea, results showed that the trained SVR model achieved the RMSEs of 2 mGy to 2.8 mGy on the test sets, 1.5 mGy to 2.5 mGy on the train sets. The calculated MAPE ranged from 0.1 to 0.18 on the test sets, and 0.08 to 0.15 on the train sets. The calculated R-squared was 0.75 to 0.89 on test sets. CONCLUSIONS: By combined utilization of the SVR algorithm and thoracic radiomics features, patient-specific thoracic organ doses could be predicted accurately, fast, and robustly in one second even using one single CPU core. Show more
Keywords: Thoracic CT scanning, patient-specific modeling, radiation dosage, radiomics, support vector regression
DOI: 10.3233/XST-240015
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1185-1197, 2024
Authors: Huang, Ying | Cai, Ruxin | Pi, Yifei | Ma, Kui | Kong, Qing | Zhuo, Weihai | Kong, Yan
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: This study aims to explore the feasibility of DenseNet in the establishment of a three-dimensional (3D) gamma prediction model of IMRT based on the actual parameters recorded in the log files during delivery. METHODS: A total of 55 IMRT plans (including 367 fields) were randomly selected. The gamma analysis was performed using gamma criteria of 3% /3 mm (Dose Difference/Distance to Agreement), 3% /2 mm, 2% /3 mm, and 2% /2 mm with a 10% dose threshold. In addition, the log files that recorded the gantry angle, monitor units (MU), multi-leaf collimator (MLC), and jaws position during delivery were …collected. These log files were then converted to MU-weighted fluence maps as the input of DenseNet, gamma passing rates (GPRs) under four different gamma criteria as the output, and mean square errors (MSEs) as the loss function of this model. RESULTS: Under different gamma criteria, the accuracy of a 3D GPR prediction model decreased with the implementation of stricter gamma criteria. In the test set, the mean absolute error (MAE) of the prediction model under the gamma criteria of 3% /3 mm, 2% /3 mm, 3% /2 mm, and 2% /2 mm was 1.41, 1.44, 3.29, and 3.54, respectively; the root mean square error (RMSE) was 1.91, 1.85, 4.27, and 4.40, respectively; the Sr was 0.487, 0.554, 0.573, and 0.506, respectively. There was a correlation between predicted and measured GPRs (P < 0.01). Additionally, there was no significant difference in the accuracy between the validation set and the test set. The accuracy in the high GPR group was high, and the MAE in the high GPR group was smaller than that in the low GPR group under four different gamma criteria. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, a 3D GPR prediction model of patient-specific QA using DenseNet was established based on log files. As an auxiliary tool for 3D dose verification in IMRT, this model is expected to improve the accuracy and efficiency of dose validation. Show more
Keywords: Three-dimensional gamma prediction, log files, patient-specific quality assurance
DOI: 10.3233/XST-230412
Citation: Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 1199-1208, 2024
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