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Enhancing Lesion Detection in Rat CT Images: A Deep Learning-Based Super-Resolution Study
Enhancing Lesion Detection in Rat CT Images: A Deep Learning-Based Super-Resolution Study
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Enhancing Lesion Detection in Rat CT Images: A Deep Learning-Based Super-Resolution Study
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Enhancing Lesion Detection in Rat CT Images: A Deep Learning-Based Super-Resolution Study
Enhancing Lesion Detection in Rat CT Images: A Deep Learning-Based Super-Resolution Study

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Enhancing Lesion Detection in Rat CT Images: A Deep Learning-Based Super-Resolution Study
Enhancing Lesion Detection in Rat CT Images: A Deep Learning-Based Super-Resolution Study
Journal Article

Enhancing Lesion Detection in Rat CT Images: A Deep Learning-Based Super-Resolution Study

2025
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Overview
Background/Objectives: Preclinical chest computed tomography (CT) imaging in small animals is often limited by low resolution due to scan time and dose constraints, which hinders accurate detection of subtle lesions. Traditional super-resolution (SR) metrics, such as peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) and structural similarity index (SSIM), may not adequately reflect clinical interpretability. We aimed to evaluate whether deep learning-based SR models could enhance image quality and lesion detectability in rat chest CT, balancing quantitative metrics with radiologist assessment. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 222 chest CT scans acquired from polyhexamethylene guanidine phosphate (PHMG-p) exposure studies in Sprague Dawley rats. Three SR models were implemented and compared: single-image SR (SinSR), segmentation-guided SinSR with lung cropping (SinSR3), and omni-super-resolution (OmniSR). Models were trained on rat CT data and evaluated using PSNR and SSIM. Two board-certified thoracic radiologists independently performed blinded evaluations of lesion margin clarity, nodule detectability, image noise, artifacts, and overall image quality. Results: SinSR1 achieved the highest PSNR (33.64 ± 1.30 dB), while SinSR3 showed the highest SSIM (0.72 ± 0.08). Despite lower PSNR (29.21 ± 1.46 dB), OmniSR received the highest radiologist ratings for lesion margin clarity, nodule detectability, and overall image quality (mean score 4.32 ± 0.41, κ = 0.74). Reader assessments diverged from PSNR and SSIM, highlighting the limited correlation between conventional metrics and clinical interpretability. Conclusions: Deep learning-based SR improved visualization of rat chest CT images, with OmniSR providing the most clinically interpretable results despite modest numerical scores. These findings underscore the need for reader-centered evaluation when applying SR techniques to preclinical imaging.