Towards High-Quality MRI Reconstruction With Anisotropic Diffusion-Assisted Generative Adversarial Networks and Its Multi-Modal Images Extension.

Journal: IEEE journal of biomedical and health informatics
PMID:

Abstract

Recently, fast Magnetic Resonance Imaging reconstruction technology has emerged as a promising way to improve the clinical diagnostic experience by significantly reducing scan times. While existing studies have used Generative Adversarial Networks to achieve impressive results in reconstructing MR images, they still suffer from challenges such as blurred zones/boundaries and abnormal spots caused by inevitable noise in the reconstruction process. To this end, we propose a novel deep framework termed Anisotropic Diffusion-Assisted Generative Adversarial Networks, which aims to maximally preserve valid high-frequency information and structural details while minimizing noises in reconstructed images by optimizing a joint loss function in a unified framework. In doing so, it enables more authentic and accurate MR image generation. To specifically handle unforeseeable noises, an Anisotropic Diffused Reconstruction Module is developed and added aside the backbone network as a denoise assistant, which improves the final image quality by minimizing reconstruction losses between targets and iteratively denoised generative outputs with no extra computational complexity during the testing phase. To make the most of valuable MRI data, we extend its application to support multi-modal learning to boost reconstructed image quality by aggregating more valid information from images of diverse modalities. Extensive experiments on public datasets show that the proposed framework can achieve superior performance in polishing up the quality of reconstructed MR images. For example, the proposed method obtains average PSNR and mSSIM values of 35.785 dB and 0.9765 on the MRNet dataset, which are at least about 2.9 dB and 0.07 higher than those from the baselines.

Authors

  • Yuyang Luo
    Department of Biomedical Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, NJ, USA.
  • Gengshen Wu
  • Yi Liu
    Department of Interventional Therapy, Ningbo No. 2 Hospital, Ningbo, China.
  • Wenjian Liu
    School of Biomedical Engineering, ShanghaiTech University, Shanghai, China.
  • Jungong Han
    School of Computing and Communications, Lancaster University, United Kingdom.