Literature DB >> 10755717

A novel phantom design for emission tomography enabling scatter- and attenuation-"free" single-photon emission tomography imaging.

S A Larsson1, C Jonsson, M Pagani, L Johansson, H Jacobsson.   

Abstract

A newly designed technique for experimental single-photon emission tomography (SPET) and positron emission tomography (PET) data acquisition with minor disturbing effects from scatter and attenuation has been developed. In principle, the method is based on discrete sampling of the radioactivity distribution in 3D objects by means of equidistant 2D planes. The starting point is a set of digitised 2D sections representing the radioactivity distribution of the 3D object. Having a radioactivity-related grey scale, the 2D images are printed on paper sheets using radioactive ink. The radioactive sheets can be shaped to the outline of the object and stacked into a 3D structure with air or some arbitrary dense material in between. For this work, equidistantly spaced transverse images of a uniform cylindrical phantom and of the digitised Hoffman rCBF phantom were selected and printed out on paper sheets. The uniform radioactivity sheets were imaged on the surface of a low-energy ultra-high-resolution collimator (4 mm full-width at half-maximum) of a three-headed SPET camera. The reproducibility was 0.7% and the uniformity was 1.2%. Each rCBF sheet, containing between 8.3 and 80 MBq of 99mTcO4- depending on size, was first imaged on the collimator and then stacked into a 3D structure with constant 12 mm air spacing between the slices. SPET was performed with the sheets perpendicular to the central axis of the camera. The total weight of the stacked rCBF phantom in air was 63 g, giving a scatter contribution comparable to that of a point source in air. The overall attenuation losses were <20%. A second SPET study was performed with 12-mm polystyrene plates in between the radioactive sheets. With polystyrene plates, the total phantom weight was 2300 g, giving a scatter and attenuation magnitude similar to that of a patient study. With the proposed technique, it is possible to obtain "ideal" experimental images (essentially built up by primary photons) for comparison with "real" images degraded by photon scattering and attenuation losses. The method can serve as a tool for experimental validation and intercomparison of attenuation and scatter correction methods. Moreover, the large flexibility of this phantom design will allow investigations of arbitrary activity distributions and autoradiography or other imaging techniques such as PET, x-ray computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10755717     DOI: 10.1007/s002590050018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med        ISSN: 0340-6997


  6 in total

1.  Classification and evaluation strategies of auto-segmentation approaches for PET: Report of AAPM task group No. 211.

Authors:  Mathieu Hatt; John A Lee; Charles R Schmidtlein; Issam El Naqa; Curtis Caldwell; Elisabetta De Bernardi; Wei Lu; Shiva Das; Xavier Geets; Vincent Gregoire; Robert Jeraj; Michael P MacManus; Osama R Mawlawi; Ursula Nestle; Andrei B Pugachev; Heiko Schöder; Tony Shepherd; Emiliano Spezi; Dimitris Visvikis; Habib Zaidi; Assen S Kirov
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2017-05-18       Impact factor: 4.071

2.  A fillable micro-hollow sphere lesion detection phantom using superposition.

Authors:  Frank P Difilippo; Sven L Gallo; Ryan S Klatte; Sagar Patel
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2010-08-24       Impact factor: 3.609

Review 3.  Physical imaging phantoms for simulation of tumor heterogeneity in PET, CT, and MRI: An overview of existing designs.

Authors:  Alejandra Valladares; Thomas Beyer; Ivo Rausch
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2020-02-12       Impact factor: 4.071

4.  3D printing of radioactive phantoms for nuclear medicine imaging.

Authors:  Tilman Läppchen; Lorenz P Meier; Markus Fürstner; George A Prenosil; Thomas Krause; Axel Rominger; Bernd Klaeser; Michael Hentschel
Journal:  EJNMMI Phys       Date:  2020-04-22

5.  A novel phantom technique for evaluating the performance of PET auto-segmentation methods in delineating heterogeneous and irregular lesions.

Authors:  B Berthon; C Marshall; R Holmes; E Spezi
Journal:  EJNMMI Phys       Date:  2015-06-27

6.  The subresolution DaTSCAN phantom: a cost-effective, flexible alternative to traditional phantom technology.

Authors:  Jonathan C Taylor; Nicholas Vennart; Ian Negus; Robin Holmes; Oliver Bandmann; Christine Lo; John Fenner
Journal:  Nucl Med Commun       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 1.690

  6 in total

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