| Literature DB >> 31300962 |
Julien Salvadori1,2, Laetitia Imbert3,4,5,6, Mathieu Perrin5, Gilles Karcher4,5, Zohra Lamiral7, Pierre-Yves Marie4,5,7, Antoine Verger3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The quality of phantom images was previously shown to be higher on digital (Vereos Philips®) compared to analog PET (Ingenuity Philips®) cameras. This study aimed to determine the extent to which this difference still remains significant on normal brain 18F-FDG PET images.Entities:
Keywords: Brain 18F-FDG; Contrast; Digital PET; Image quality; Noise; Spatial resolution
Year: 2019 PMID: 31300962 PMCID: PMC6626093 DOI: 10.1186/s13550-019-0526-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res Impact factor: 3.138
Fig. 1Contrast recovery coefficients determined in percentages for the 10-mm hot sphere, with 2-mm voxel size for analog and digital PET and with 1-mm voxel size for digital PET and displayed according to relative noise (coefficient of variation in the background, in percentages) for each number of iterations. Black symbols and dashed arrows represent the numbers of iterations considered to reach sufficiently high levels of convergence. This convergence was reached at 5 iterations for the digital PET with either 1-mm or 2-mm voxels size and at 10 iterations for the analog PET
Fig. 2Schematic representations of methods used on axial 18F-FDG brain PET images to a quantify the contrast between central (striata) or peripheral (occiput) gray-matter structures and a white matter structure (semi-oval center), b determine the sharpness index through the maximal slope of count profiles obtained perpendicularly to the gray/white-matter interfaces of striata and occiput and further normalized to the maximal curve value, and c quantify the noise level within the semi-oval area
Fig. 3Left panels: box-plots for a gray/white-matter contrast, b sharpness, and c relative noise index obtained with current 2-mm reconstruction processes of analog and digital PET images and with a 1-mm reconstruction process developed for digital PET images. Right panel: corresponding parameters provided by a visual analysis from experienced physicians (sum-scores for contrast, spatial resolution, and noise level)
Fig. 4Gallery of axial brain 18F-FDG PET images obtained with analog PET and a current reconstruction method using a 2-mm voxel size (n = 10) (upper row), with digital PET and either a comparable reconstruction method with 2-mm voxel size (n = 10) (middle row) or a high-resolution reconstruction method with 1-mm voxel size (n = 10) (lower row)