Improved Quantitative Analysis Method for Magnetic Particle Imaging Based on Deblurring and Region Scalable Fitting

    Purpose Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is a technique for imaging magnetic particle concentration distribution. It has the advantages of high sensitivity, no signal attenuation with depth, and no ionizing radiation. Although MPI has been widely used in the biomedical field, accurate image analy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular imaging and biology 2023-08, Vol.25 (4), p.788-797
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Lu, Huang, Yan, Zhao, Yishen, Tian, Jie, Zhang, Lu, Du, Yang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:    Purpose Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is a technique for imaging magnetic particle concentration distribution. It has the advantages of high sensitivity, no signal attenuation with depth, and no ionizing radiation. Although MPI has been widely used in the biomedical field, accurate image analysis has been challenging due to its anisotropic point spread function (PSF). The purpose of this study is to propose an MPI image restoring and segmentation method to facilitate a more precise quantitative evaluation of the magnetic particle imaging in vivo . Procedures We proposed a DeRSF method that combined deblurring and region scalable fitting (RSF) to determine the imaging tracer distribution. Then a uniform erosion and scaling criterion was established based on simulation experiments to correct the segmentation results, which was further validated on phantom imaging. Finally, we imaged the MPI tracer at gradient concentrations to establish the calibration curve between the MPI signal and iron mass for iron quantification in phantom and in vivo imaging. Results The phantom imaging experiments showed that our method achieved improved segmentation performance. The mean value of the dice coefficients for segmentation was up to 0.86, demonstrating that our method can accurately map and quantify the distribution of the tracer. Moreover, the iron quantification on both phantom and in vivo mouse imaging was realized with the minimal error of 5.50%, by our established calibration curve. Conclusions Our proposed DeRSF method was successfully used for improved MPI quantitative analysis. More importantly, this method also showed accurate quantitative results on images with different shapes and tracer concentrations in both phantom and in vivo data , which laid the foundation for the biomedical study of MPI.
ISSN:1536-1632
1860-2002
DOI:10.1007/s11307-023-01812-x