Literature DB >> 27072004

Traditional gamma cameras are preferred.

E Gordon DePuey1.   

Abstract

Although the new solid-state dedicated cardiac cameras provide excellent spatial and energy resolution and allow for markedly reduced SPECT acquisition times and/or injected radiopharmaceutical activity, they have some distinct disadvantages compared to traditional sodium iodide SPECT cameras. They are expensive. Attenuation correction is not available. Cardio-focused collimation, advantageous to increase depth-dependent resolution and myocardial count density, accentuates diaphragmatic attenuation and scatter from subdiaphragmatic structures. Although supplemental prone imaging is therefore routinely advised, many patients cannot tolerate it. Moreover, very large patients cannot be accommodated in the solid-state camera gantries. Since data are acquired simultaneously with an arc of solid-state detectors around the chest, no temporally dependent "rotating" projection images are obtained. Therefore, patient motion can be neither detected nor corrected. In contrast, traditional sodium iodide SPECT cameras provide rotating projection images to allow technologists and physicians to detect and correct patient motion and to accurately detect the position of soft tissue attenuators and to anticipate associated artifacts. Very large patients are easily accommodated. Low-dose x-ray attenuation correction is widely available. Also, relatively inexpensive low-count density software is provided by many vendors, allowing shorter SPECT acquisition times and reduced injected activity approaching that achievable with solid-state cameras.

Entities:  

Keywords:  SPECT; attenuation correction; cadmium-zinc-telluride; sodium iodide; solid-state cameras

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27072004     DOI: 10.1007/s12350-016-0460-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol        ISSN: 1071-3581            Impact factor:   5.952


  5 in total

1.  Recommendations for reducing radiation exposure in myocardial perfusion imaging.

Authors:  Manuel D Cerqueira; Kevin C Allman; Edward P Ficaro; Christopher L Hansen; Kenneth J Nichols; Randall C Thompson; William A Van Decker; Marko Yakovlevitch
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 5.952

2.  Very low-activity stress/high-activity rest, single-day myocardial perfusion SPECT with a conventional sodium iodide camera and wide beam reconstruction processing.

Authors:  E Gordon DePuey; Pashmina Ata; Rick Wray; Marvin Friedman
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2012-07-10       Impact factor: 5.952

3.  New software methods to cope with reduced counting statistics: shorter SPECT acquisitions and many more possibilities.

Authors:  E Gordon Depuey
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2009-04-28       Impact factor: 5.952

4.  Myocardial perfusion SPECT horizontal motion artifact.

Authors:  Vikram Agarwal; E Gordon DePuey
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2014-07-01       Impact factor: 5.952

5.  Evaluation of general-purpose collimators against high-resolution collimators with resolution recovery with a view to reducing radiation dose in myocardial perfusion SPECT: A preliminary phantom study.

Authors:  Ian S Armstrong; Kimberley J Saint; Christine M Tonge; Parthiban Arumugam
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2016-01-25       Impact factor: 5.952

  5 in total
  8 in total

1.  Dedicated cardiac CZT SPECT is steadily moving to achieve its destiny.

Authors:  Doumit Daou
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2017-07-25       Impact factor: 5.952

2.  A further step towards getting cardiac respiratory motion under control.

Authors:  Andreas A Giannopoulos; Ronny R Buechel
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2017-02-28       Impact factor: 5.952

3.  Impact of data-driven cardiac respiratory motion correction on the extent and severity of myocardial perfusion defects with free-breathing CZT SPECT.

Authors:  Doumit Daou; Rémy Sabbah; Carlos Coaguila; Hatem Boulahdour
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2017-02-03       Impact factor: 5.952

4.  Triage of patients for attenuation-corrected stress-first Tc-99m SPECT MPI using a simplified clinical pre-test scoring model.

Authors:  Shreyas Gowdar; Waseem Chaudhry; Alan W Ahlberg; Milena J Henzlova; W Lane Duvall
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2017-03-13       Impact factor: 5.952

5.  Which SPECT for today, which SPECT for tomorrow?

Authors:  Milena J Henzlova; W Lane Duvall
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2016-04-12       Impact factor: 5.952

Review 6.  Recent Advances in Nuclear Cardiology.

Authors:  Won Woo Lee
Journal:  Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2016-07-13

Review 7.  The role of pharmacological stress testing in women.

Authors:  Katherine Standbridge; Eliana Reyes
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2016-08-11       Impact factor: 5.952

Review 8.  Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy dosimetry: optimal use of SPECT and SPECT/CT technologies in stress-first imaging protocol.

Authors:  M Lecchi; S Malaspina; C Scabbio; V Gaudieri; A Del Sole
Journal:  Clin Transl Imaging       Date:  2016-10-31
  8 in total

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