Literature DB >> 9443760

Importance of bone attenuation in brain SPECT quantification.

R Z Stodilka1, B J Kemp, F S Prato, R L Nicholson.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of nonuniform attenuation on relative quantification in brain SPECT and to compare the ability of the Chang and Sorenson uniform attenuation corrections (UACs) to achieve volumetric relative quantification.
METHODS: Three head phantoms (dry human skull, Rando and Radiology Support Devices (RSD) phantoms) were compared with a human head using a gamma camera transmission CT (gammaTCT) SPECT system and x-ray CT. Subsequently, the RSD phantom's brain reservoir was filled with a uniform water solution of 99mTc, and SPECT and gammaTCT data were acquired using fanbeam collimation. The attenuating effects of bone, scalp and head-holder in individual projections were determined by an analytical projection technique using the SPECT and gammaTCT reconstructions. The Chang UAC used brain and head contours that were segmented from the gammaTCT reconstruction to demarcate its attenuation map, whereas the Sorenson UAC fit slice-specific ellipses to the SPECT projection data. For each UAC, volumetric relative quantification was measured with varying attenuation coefficients (mus) of the attenuation map.
RESULTS: Gamma camera transmission CT and x-ray CT scans showed that the dry skull and Rando phantoms suffered from a dried trabecular bone compartment. The RSD phantom most closely reproduced the attenuation coefficients of the human gammaTCT and x-ray CT scans. The analytical projections showed that the attenuating effects of bone, scalp and head-holder were nonuniform across the projections and accounted for 18%-37% of the total count loss. Volumetric relative quantification was best achieved with the Chang (zero iterations) attenuation correction using the head contour and mu = 0.075 cm(-1); however, cortical activity was found to be 10% higher than cerebellar activity. For all UACs, the optimal choices of mu were experimentally found to be lower than the recommended 0.12 cm(-1) for brain tissue. This result is theoretically supported here.
CONCLUSION: The magnitude of errors resulting from uniform attenuation corrections can be greater than the magnitudes of regional cerebral blood flow deficits in patients with dementia, as compared with normal controls. This suggests that nonuniform attenuation correction in brain SPECT imaging must be applied to accurately estimate regional cerebral blood flow.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9443760

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


  9 in total

1.  Attenuation compensation in cerebral 3D PET: effect of the attenuation map on absolute and relative quantitation.

Authors:  Habib Zaidi; Marie-Louise Montandon; Daniel O Slosman
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2003-10-22       Impact factor: 9.236

2.  Which attenuation coefficient to use in combined attenuation and scatter corrections for quantitative brain SPET?

Authors:  Habib Zaidi; Marie-Louise Montandon
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2002-07       Impact factor: 9.236

3.  Cross-camera comparison of SPECT measurements of a 3-D anthropomorphic basal ganglia phantom.

Authors:  Walter Koch; Perry E Radau; Wolfgang Münzing; Klaus Tatsch
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2006-01-25       Impact factor: 9.236

4.  Role and limitations of the geometric mean method regarding head rotation in salivary gland scintigraphy: a phantom study.

Authors:  I-Feng Chen; Li-Fan Lin; Chun-Long Lin; Tzu-Jou Chung; Ta-Wei Tseng; Chuang-Hsin Chiu
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2020-09-08       Impact factor: 2.724

5.  Three-dimensional brain phantom containing bone and grey matter structures with a realistic head contour.

Authors:  Hidehiro Iida; Yuki Hori; Kenji Ishida; Etsuko Imabayashi; Hiroshi Matsuda; Masaaki Takahashi; Hirotaka Maruno; Akihide Yamamoto; Kazuhiro Koshino; Junichiro Enmi; Satoshi Iguchi; Tetsuaki Moriguchi; Hidekazu Kawashima; Tsutomu Zeniya
Journal:  Ann Nucl Med       Date:  2012-09-26       Impact factor: 2.668

6.  The Role of CT-Based Attenuation Correction and Collimator Blurring Correction in Striatal Spect Quantification.

Authors:  J M Warwick; S Rubow; M du Toit; E Beetge; P Carey; P Dupont
Journal:  Int J Mol Imaging       Date:  2011-04-06

7.  Influences of reconstruction and attenuation correction in brain SPECT images obtained by the hybrid SPECT/CT device: evaluation with a 3-dimensional brain phantom.

Authors:  Mana Akamatsu; Yasuo Yamashita; Go Akamatsu; Yuji Tsutsui; Nobuyoshi Ohya; Yasuhiko Nakamura; Masayuki Sasaki
Journal:  Asia Ocean J Nucl Med Biol       Date:  2014

8.  Investigation of attenuation correction for small-animal single photon emission computed tomography.

Authors:  Hsin-Hui Lee; Jyh-Cheng Chen
Journal:  Comput Math Methods Med       Date:  2013-06-11       Impact factor: 2.238

9.  CT-Based Attenuation Correction in Brain SPECT/CT Can Improve the Lesion Detectability of Voxel-Based Statistical Analyses.

Authors:  Hiroki Kato; Eku Shimosegawa; Koichi Fujino; Jun Hatazawa
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-07-21       Impact factor: 3.240

  9 in total

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