. Positron Emission Tomography and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (PET-MRI) systems can obtain functional and anatomical scans. But PET suffers from a low signal-to-noise ratio, while MRI are time-consuming. To address time-consuming, an effective strategy involves reducing k-space data collection, albeit at the cost of lowering image quality. This study aims to leverage the inherent complementarity within PET-MRI data to enhance the image quality of PET-MRI.. A novel PET-MRI joint reconstruction model, termed MC-Diffusion, is proposed in the Bayesian framework. The joint reconstruction problem is transformed into a joint regularization problem, where data fidelity terms of PET and MRI are expressed independently. The regular term, the derivative of the logarithm of the joint probability distribution of PET and MRI, employs a joint score-based diffusion model for learning. The diffusion model involves the forward diffusion process and the reverse diffusion process. The forward diffusion process adds noise to transform a complex joint data distribution into a known joint prior distribution for PET and MRI simultaneously, resembling a denoiser. The reverse diffusion process removes noise using a denoiser to revert the joint prior distribution to the original joint data distribution, effectively utilizing joint probability distribution to describe the correlations of PET and MRI for improved quality of joint reconstruction.. Qualitative and quantitative improvements are observed with the MC-Diffusion model. Comparative analysis against LPLS and Joint ISAT-net on the ADNI dataset demonstrates superior performance by exploiting complementary information between PET and MRI. The MC-Diffusion model effectively enhances the quality of PET and MRI images.. This study employs the MC-Diffusion model to enhance the quality of PET-MRI images by integrating the fundamental principles of PET and MRI modalities and leveraging their inherent complementarity. Furthermore, utilizing the diffusion model to learn the joint probability distribution of PET and MRI, thereby elucidating their latent correlation, facilitates a more profound comprehension of the priors obtained through deep learning, contrasting with black-box prior or artificially constructed structural similarities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/ad6117 | DOI Listing |
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