| Literature DB >> 32820211 |
Akihisa Omata1, Jun Kataoka2, Kazuya Fujieda2, Shogo Sato2, Eri Kuriyama2, Hiroki Kato3, Atsushi Toyoshima4, Takahiro Teramoto4, Kazuhiro Ooe3, Yuwei Liu3, Keiko Matsunaga3, Takashi Kamiya3, Tadashi Watabe3, Eku Shimosegawa3, Jun Hatazawa3.
Abstract
X-ray and gamma-ray imaging are technologies with several applications in nuclear medicine, homeland security, and high-energy astrophysics. However, it is generally difficult to realize simultaneous wide-band imaging ranging from a few tens of keV to MeV because different interactions between photons and the detector material occur, depending on the photon energies. For instance, photoabsorption occurs below 100 keV, whereas Compton scattering dominates above a few hundreds of keV. Moreover, radioactive sources generally emit both X-ray and gamma-ray photons. In this study, we develop a "hybrid" Compton camera that can simultaneously achieve X-ray and gamma-ray imaging by combining features of "Compton" and "pinhole" cameras in a single detector system. Similar to conventional Compton cameras, the detector consists of two layers of scintillator arrays with the forward layer acting as a scatterer for high-energy photons (> 200 keV) and an active pinhole for low-energy photons (< 200 keV). The experimental results on the performance of the hybrid camera were consistent with those from the Geant4 simulation. We simultaneously imaged [Formula: see text]Am (60 keV) and [Formula: see text]Cs (662 keV) in the same field of view, achieving an angular resolution of 10[Formula: see text] (FWHM) for both sources. In addition, imaging of [Formula: see text]At was conducted for the application in future nuclear medicine, particularly radionuclide therapy. The initial demonstrative images of the [Formula: see text]At phantom were reconstructed using the pinhole mode (using 79 keV) and Compton mode (using 570 keV), exhibiting significant similarities in source-position localization. We also verified that a mouse injected with 1 MBq of [Formula: see text]At can be imaged via pinhole-mode measurement in an hour.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32820211 PMCID: PMC7441182 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-71019-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Examples of -particle emitters for RNT and their main X-rays and gamma rays (and their absolute intensities, in percentage) accompanied by the adaptability of the pinhole mode and/or the Compton mode.
| Radionuclide | X ray (keV) | Gamma ray (keV) (absolute intensity) | Pinhole | Compton |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 79 (31.1%) | 570 (0.3%) | |||
| 79 (3.2%) | 440 (26.1%), 465 (2.1%), 1,567 (2.2%) | |||
| 218 (11.6%), 440 (26.1%) | ||||
| 83 (41.7%) | 351 (12.9%) | |||
| 239 (43.3%), 511 (8.2%), 583 (30.4%), 2,615 (35.7%) |
Figure 1Comparison of the simulated energy response of the intrinsic efficiency (left) and angular resolution (right) with the results of actual measurements.
Figure 2(Upper) The experimental configuration of the simultaneous measurement of Am and Cs. (Lower) The MLEM reconstructed images of the Am (60 keV) source analyzed by the pinhole mode (left) and the Cs (662 keV) source analyzed by the Compton mode (right).
Figure 3The MLEM reconstructed images of “L”-shaped sources. Pinhole reconstruction of the Am source (left) and Compton reconstruction of the Cs source (right) that were measured separately.
Figure 4Energy spectrum of At obtained by a LaBr scintillator coupled to a PMT.
Figure 5The pinhole MLEM reconstruction image (left) and the Compton MLEM reconstruction image (right) of a bottle with At at the center of the FOV (upper) and to the right (lower).
Figure 6(Left) Experimental configuration of the measurement of the mouse administered with At. (Center) The pinhole MLEM reconstructed image obtained by 1 h of measurement. (Right) The Compton MLEM reconstructed image obtained by 11 h of measurement.
Figure 7The configuration of the hybrid camera (left). Schematic view of the pinhole event (center) for the lower energy range and the Compton event (right) for the higher energy range that are used for the pinhole/Compton reconstruction in the hybrid camera.
Factors of event selection for each reconstruction mode.
| Mode | Coincidence selection | Energy cut |
|---|---|---|
| Pinhole | Anti-coincidence (rear) | Rear |
| Compton | Coincidence (front and rear) | Sum and front |
Figure 8(Left) Energy spectrum of all the events detected in either detector (black), the events accumulated by with the front detector (green), the events obtained only with the rear detector (blue) and the events reacted with both detectors (red) accumulated from placing Am and Cs sources simultaneously in front of the detector. (Right) 2D energy spectrum of coincidence events from the front detector (scatterer) and the rear detector (absorber). The area painted red corresponds to the energy cut range for 662 keV Compton events. The brightest area ( 200 keV) corresponds to back-scattering events.
The numbers for applied energy cuts.
| Radionuclide | Target (keV) | Mode | Energy cut (keV) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60 | Pinhole | ||
| 662 | Compton | ||
| 79 | Pinhole | ||
| 570 | Compton |