Department of Biomedical Engineering, Kyung Hee University, 1 Seochun, Yongin-si, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea.
Med Phys. 2012 Sep;39(9):5469-78. doi: 10.1118/1.4742902.
Elastography is a medical imaging modality to visualize the elasticity of soft tissues. Ultrasound and MRI have been exclusively used for elastography of soft tissues since they can sensitize the tissues' minute displacements of an order of μm. It is known that ultrasound and MRI elastography show cancerous tissues with much higher contrast than conventional ultrasound and MRI. To evaluate possibility of combining elastography with x-ray imaging, we have calculated strain images of a breast-mimicking phantom from its 3D CT image data.
We first simulated the x-ray elastography using a FEM model which incorporated both the elasticity and x-ray attenuation behaviors of breast tissues. After validating the x-ray elastography scheme by simulation, we made a breast-mimicking phantom that contained a hard inclusion against soft background. With a micro-CT, we took 3D images of the phantom twice, changing the compressing force to the phantom. From the two 3D phantom images taken with two different compression ratios, we calculated the displacement vector maps that represented the compression-induced pixel displacements. In calculating the displacement vectors, we tracked the movements of image feature patterns from the less-compressed-phantom images to the more-compressed-phantom images using the 3D image correlation technique. We obtained strain images of the phantom by differentiating the displacement vector maps.
The FEM simulation has shown that x-ray strain imaging is possible by tracking image feature patterns in the 3D CT images of the breast-mimicking phantom. The experimental displacement and strain images of a breast-mimicking phantom, obtained from the 3D micro-CT images taken with 0%-3% compression ratios, show behaviors similar to the FEM simulation results. The contrast and noise performance of the strain images improves as the phantom compression ratio increases.
We have experimentally shown that we can improve x-ray strain image quality by applying 3D image correlation to the two sets of 3D CT images taken with different compression ratios. But, we need further investigations to evaluate the strain imaging performance considering the noise and decorrelation effects as well as the extra dose caused by two scans.
弹性成像是一种用于可视化软组织弹性的医学成像方式。由于能够敏感地检测到组织亚微米级别的微小位移,超声和 MRI 一直被专门用于软组织的弹性成像。已知超声和 MRI 弹性成像显示癌症组织的对比度明显高于传统的超声和 MRI。为了评估将弹性成像与 X 射线成像相结合的可能性,我们根据 3D CT 图像数据计算了乳腺模拟体模的应变图像。
我们首先使用包含乳腺组织弹性和 X 射线衰减特性的有限元模型模拟 X 射线弹性成像。通过模拟验证 X 射线弹性成像方案后,我们制作了一个包含硬夹杂的乳腺模拟体模,夹杂位于软背景中。我们使用微 CT 对体模进行了两次 3D 成像,改变了体模的压缩力。从两次具有不同压缩比的体模 3D 图像中,我们计算了表示压缩引起的像素位移的位移矢量图。在计算位移矢量时,我们使用 3D 图像相关技术,从压缩程度较小的体模图像跟踪图像特征图案的运动,到压缩程度较大的体模图像。我们通过对位移矢量图进行微分,获得了体模的应变图像。
有限元模拟表明,通过跟踪乳腺模拟体模的 3D CT 图像中的图像特征图案,可以进行 X 射线应变成像。从 0%-3%压缩比的 3D 微 CT 图像获得的乳腺模拟体模的实验位移和应变图像表现出与有限元模拟结果相似的行为。随着体模压缩比的增加,应变图像的对比度和噪声性能得到改善。
我们通过将 3D 图像相关技术应用于两组具有不同压缩比的 3D CT 图像,实验证明可以提高 X 射线应变图像质量。但是,我们需要进一步研究,以评估考虑噪声和去相关效应以及两次扫描引起的额外剂量的应变成像性能。