| Literature DB >> 34764407 |
Thomas Wesarg1, Susan Arndt1, Iva Speck2, Valentin Rottmayer1, Konstantin Wiebe1, Antje Aschendorff1, Johannes Thurow3, Lars Frings3, Philipp T Meyer3.
Abstract
Positron emission tomography (PET) has been successfully used to investigate central nervous processes, including the central auditory pathway. Unlike early water-cooled PET-scanners, novel PET/CT scanners employ air cooling and include a CT system, both of which result in higher background noise levels. In the present study, we describe the background noise generated by two state-of-the-art air-cooled PET/CT scanners. We measured speech recognition in background noise: recorded PET noise and a speech-shaped noise applied in clinical routine to subjects with normal hearing. Background noise produced by air-cooled PET/CT is considerable: 75.1 dB SPL (64.5 dB(A)) for the Philips Gemini TF64 and 76.9 dB SPL (68.4 dB(A)) for the Philips Vereos PET/CT (Philips Healthcare, The Netherlands). Subjects with normal hearing exhibited better speech recognition in recorded PET background noise compared with clinically applied speech-shaped noise. Speech recognition in both background noises correlated significantly. Background noise generated by PET/CT scanners should be considered when PET is used for the investigation of the central auditory pathway. Speech in PET noise is better than in speech-shaped noise because of the minor masking effect of the background noise of the PET/CT.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34764407 PMCID: PMC8585948 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-01686-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Characteristics of included subjects.
| Subject ID | Age at testing (years) | Sex | Air conduction PTA4 [dB HL] | Speech reception threshold in background noise of Oldenburg sentence test [dB SNR] | Speech reception threshold in PET noise [dB SNR] | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Right ear | Left ear | |||||
| NH1 | 26.1 | Male | 8.75 | 12.5 | − 7.9 | − 11.5 |
| NH2 | 25.1 | Female | 6.25 | 2.5 | − 7.0 | − 10.7 |
| NH3 | 39.3 | Female | 10 | 10 | − 6.0 | − 9.1 |
| NH4 | 22.3 | Female | 6.25 | 6.25 | − 5.5 | − 8.8 |
| NH5 | 26.1 | Female | 12.5 | 18.75 | − 6.7 | − 10.8 |
| NH6 | 26.1 | Male | 3.75 | 3.75 | − 5.3 | − 8.9 |
| NH7 | 20.7 | Male | 6.25 | 6.25 | − 6.1 | − 10.4 |
| NH8 | 32.7 | Female | 10 | 10 | − 5.2 | − 9.6 |
| NH9 | 24.6 | Male | 13.75 | 16.25 | − 5.9 | − 8.6 |
| NH10 | 30.7 | Male | 20 | 30 | − 4.6 | − 6.9 |
Figure 1Mean hearing threshold levels ± standard deviations for subjects with normal hearing.
Figure 2Amplitude spectrum of PET noise recorded from the Gemini TF64.
Figure 3Amplitude spectrum of PET background noise recorded from the Vereos PET/CT.
Figure 4Box-and-whisker plots of the 50% speech reception threshold (SRT50) obtained for sentences in background noise of the Oldenburg sentence test at 76.9 dB SPL or PET noise (Philips Vereos PET/CT) at 76.9 dB SPL in subjects with normal hearing.
Figure 5Scatter plot of 50% speech reception threshold (SRT50) obtained for sentences in background noise of the Oldenburg sentence test (OLnoise) or PET noise (Philipps Vereos PET/CT) at 76.9 dB SPL each.