Literature DB >> 28747522

PET Imaging Stability Measurements During Simultaneous Pulsing of Aggressive MR Sequences on the SIGNA PET/MR System.

Timothy W Deller1, Mohammad Mehdi Khalighi2, Floris P Jansen3, Gary H Glover4.   

Abstract

The recent introduction of simultaneous whole-body PET/MR scanners has enabled new research taking advantage of the complementary information obtainable with PET and MRI. One such application is kinetic modeling, which requires high levels of PET quantitative stability. To accomplish the required PET stability levels, the PET subsystem must be sufficiently isolated from the effects of MR activity. Performance measurements have previously been published, demonstrating sufficient PET stability in the presence of MR pulsing for typical clinical use; however, PET stability during radiofrequency (RF)-intensive and gradient-intensive sequences has not previously been evaluated for a clinical whole-body scanner. In this work, PET stability of the GE SIGNA PET/MR was examined during simultaneous scanning of aggressive MR pulse sequences.
Methods: PET performance tests were acquired with MR idle and during simultaneous MR pulsing. Recent system improvements mitigating RF interference and gain variation were used. A fast recovery fast spin echo MR sequence was selected for high RF power, and an echo planar imaging sequence was selected for its high heat-inducing gradients. Measurements were performed to determine PET stability under varying MR conditions using the following metrics: sensitivity, scatter fraction, contrast recovery, uniformity, count rate performance, and image quantitation. A final PET quantitative stability assessment for simultaneous PET scanning during functional MRI studies was performed with a spiral in-and-out gradient echo sequence.
Results: Quantitation stability of a 68Ge flood phantom was demonstrated within 0.34%. Normalized sensitivity was stable during simultaneous scanning within 0.3%. Scatter fraction measured with a 68Ge line source in the scatter phantom was stable within the range of 40.4%-40.6%. Contrast recovery and uniformity were comparable for PET images acquired simultaneously with multiple MR conditions. Peak noise equivalent count rate was 224 kcps at an effective activity concentration of 18.6 kBq/mL, and the count rate curves and scatter fraction curve were consistent for the alternating MR pulsing states. A final test demonstrated quantitative stability during a spiral functional MRI sequence.
Conclusion: PET stability metrics demonstrated that PET quantitation was not affected during simultaneous aggressive MRI. This stability enables demanding applications such as kinetic modeling.
© 2018 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging.

Keywords:  PET/MR; fMRI; kinetic modeling; quantitation; silicon photomultiplier

Mesh:

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28747522     DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.117.194928

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nucl Med        ISSN: 0161-5505            Impact factor:   10.057


  5 in total

1.  NEMA NU2-2012 performance measurements of the United Imaging uPMR790: an integrated PET/MR system.

Authors:  Shuguang Chen; Yushen Gu; Haojun Yu; Xin Chen; Tuoyu Cao; Lingzhi Hu; Hongcheng Shi
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2021-01-03       Impact factor: 9.236

Review 2.  PET/MRI: a frontier in era of complementary hybrid imaging.

Authors:  Sikkandhar Musafargani; Krishna Kanta Ghosh; Sachin Mishra; Pachaiyappan Mahalakshmi; Parasuraman Padmanabhan; Balázs Gulyás
Journal:  Eur J Hybrid Imaging       Date:  2018-06-25

3.  Cross-validation study between the HRRT and the PET component of the SIGNA PET/MRI system with focus on neuroimaging.

Authors:  Julia G Mannheim; Ju-Chieh Kevin Cheng; Nasim Vafai; Elham Shahinfard; Carolyn English; Jessamyn McKenzie; Jing Zhang; Laura Barlow; Vesna Sossi
Journal:  EJNMMI Phys       Date:  2021-02-26

4.  Integrated Positron Emission Tomography/Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Resting-State Functional and Metabolic Imaging in Human Brain: What Is Correlated and What Is Impacted.

Authors:  Yi Shan; Zhe Wang; Shuangshuang Song; Qiaoyi Xue; Qi Ge; Hongwei Yang; Bixiao Cui; Miao Zhang; Yun Zhou; Jie Lu
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2022-03-02       Impact factor: 4.677

5.  PET Image Quality Improvement for Simultaneous PET/MRI with a Lightweight MRI Surface Coil.

Authors:  Timothy W Deller; Nicholas K Mathew; Samuel A Hurley; Chad M Bobb; Alan B McMillan
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  2020-11-03       Impact factor: 11.105

  5 in total

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