IEEE Access (Jan 2019)
Deep Generative Adversarial Networks for Thin-Section Infant MR Image Reconstruction
Abstract
Due to their high spatial resolution, thin-section magnetic resonance (MR) images serve as ideal medical images for brain structure investigation and brain surgery navigation. However, compared with the clinically widely used thick-section MR images, thin-section MR images are less available due to the imaging cost. Thin-section MR images of infants are even scarcer but are quite valuable for the study of human brain development. Therefore, we propose a method for the reconstruction of thin-section MR images from thick-section images. A two-stage reconstruction framework based on generative adversarial networks (GANs) and a convolutional neural network (CNN) is proposed to reconstruct thin-section MR images from thick-section images in the axial and sagittal planes. A 3D-Y-Net-GAN is first proposed to fuse MR images from the axial and sagittal planes and to achieve the first-stage thin-section reconstruction. A 3D-DenseU-Net followed by a stack of enhanced residual blocks is then proposed to provide further detail recalibrations and structural corrections in the sagittal plane. In this method, a comprehensive loss function is also proposed to help the networks capture more structural details. The reconstruction performance of the proposed method is compared with bicubic interpolation, sparse representation, and 3D-SRU-Net. Cross-validation based on 35 cases and independent testing based on two datasets with totally 114 cases reveal that, compared with the other three methods, the proposed method provides an average 23.5% improvement in peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), 90.5% improvement in structural similarity (SSIM), and 21.5% improvement in normalized mutual information (NMI). The quantitative evaluation and visual inspection demonstrate that our proposed method outperforms those methods by reconstructing more realistic results with better structural details.
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