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Meshless reconstruction method for fluorescence molecular tomography based on compactly supported radial basis function
Jan 04, 2016Author:
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Title: Meshless reconstruction method for fluorescence molecular tomography based on compactly supported radial basis function

Authors: An, Y; Liu, J; Zhang, GL; Ye, JZ; Mao, YM; Jiang, SX; Shang, WT; Du, Y; Chi, CW; Tian, J

Author Full Names: An, Yu; Liu, Jie; Zhang, Guanglei; Ye, Jinzuo; Mao, Yamin; Jiang, Shixin; Shang, Wenting; Du, Yang; Chi, Chongwei; Tian, Jie

Source: JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL OPTICS, 20 (10):10.1117/1.JBO.20.10.105003 OCT 2015

ISSN: 1083-3668

eISSN: 1560-2281

Article Number: 105003

Unique ID: WOS:000366017100010

Abstract:

Fluorescence molecular tomography (FMT) is a promising tool in the study of cancer, drug discovery, and disease diagnosis, enabling noninvasive and quantitative imaging of the biodistribution of fluorophores in deep tissues via image reconstruction techniques. Conventional reconstruction methods based on the finiteelement method (FEM) have achieved acceptable stability and efficiency. However, some inherent shortcomings in FEM meshes, such as time consumption in mesh generation and a large discretization error, limit further biomedical application. In this paper, we propose a meshless method for reconstruction of FMT (MM-FMT) using compactly supported radial basis functions (CSRBFs). With CSRBFs, the image domain can be accurately expressed by continuous CSRBFs, avoiding the discretization error to a certain degree. After direct collocation with CSRBFs, the conventional optimization techniques, including Tikhonov, L1-norm iteration shrinkage (L1-IS), and sparsity adaptive matching pursuit, were adopted to solve the meshless reconstruction. To evaluate the performance of the proposed MM-FMT, we performed numerical heterogeneous mouse experiments and in vivo bead-implanted mouse experiments. The results suggest that the proposed MM-FMT method can reduce the position error of the reconstruction result to smaller than 0.4 mm for the double-source case, which is a significant improvement for FMT. (C) 2015 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)

 

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