Spiral scanning and self-supervised image reconstruction enable ultra-sparse sampling multispectral photoacoustic tomography

Multispectral photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is an imaging modality that utilizes the photoacoustic effect to achieve non-invasive and high-contrast imaging of internal tissues but also molecular functional information derived from multi-spectral measurements. However, the hardware cost and computat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Photoacoustics (Munich) 2024-10, Vol.39, p.100641, Article 100641
Hauptverfasser: Zhong, Yutian, Zhang, Xiaoming, Mo, Zongxin, Zhang, Shuangyang, Nie, Liming, Chen, Wufan, Qi, Li
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Multispectral photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is an imaging modality that utilizes the photoacoustic effect to achieve non-invasive and high-contrast imaging of internal tissues but also molecular functional information derived from multi-spectral measurements. However, the hardware cost and computational demand of a multispectral PAT system consisting of up to thousands of detectors are huge. To address this challenge, we propose an ultra-sparse spiral sampling strategy for multispectral PAT, which we named U3S-PAT. Our strategy employs a sparse ring-shaped transducer that, when switching excitation wavelengths, simultaneously rotates and translates. This creates a spiral scanning pattern with multispectral angle-interlaced sampling. To solve the highly ill-conditioned image reconstruction problem, we propose a self-supervised learning method that is able to introduce structural information shared during spiral scanning. We simulate the proposed U3S-PAT method on a commercial PAT system and conduct in vivo animal experiments to verify its performance. The results show that even with a sparse sampling rate as low as 1/30, our U3S-PAT strategy achieves similar reconstruction and spectral unmixing accuracy as non-spiral dense sampling. Given its ability to dramatically reduce the time required for three-dimensional multispectral scanning, our U3S-PAT strategy has the potential to perform volumetric molecular imaging of dynamic biological activities. •U3S-PAT combines spiral scanning and multispectral interlaced sampling for sparse PAT.•A self-supervised neural network solves the ill-conditioned image reconstruction problem.•Simulation and animal experiments verify U3S-PAT at a 1/30 sparse-sampling rate.•U3S-PAT has the potential for fast, volumetric imaging of dynamic activity in vivo.
ISSN:2213-5979
2213-5979
DOI:10.1016/j.pacs.2024.100641