DocumentCode
1829905
Title
Motion tracking and radionuclide imaging
Author
Wong, Kenneth H. ; Dieterich, Sonja ; Tang, Jonathan ; Cleary, Kevin
Author_Institution
Dept. of Radiol., Georgetown Univ., Washington, DC, USA
Volume
4
fYear
2003
fDate
19-25 Oct. 2003
Firstpage
2609
Abstract
PET and SPECT provide important functional and biochemical information about a patient´s health. However, the typical nuclear medicine study requires lengthy acquisition times during which involuntary patient motion can lead to blurring in the radionuclide image. It is therefore important to be able to track and compensate for this motion, and to understand the relationship between internal organ motion/deformation and the motion of an externally observable structure such as the skin. Optical motion tracking (using a Polaris camera and passive markers) and MRI were used to characterize patient respiratory movement and generate models of respiratory-induced motion. These data were also used in SPECT imaging simulations to model the effects of realistic respiratory motion on nuclear medicine images. These studies should be useful for informing numerical, dynamic models of human anatomy and understanding the system specifications required for functional image-guided therapies.
Keywords
biomedical MRI; medical computing; medical image processing; motion compensation; optical tracking; positron emission tomography; radioisotopes; single photon emission computed tomography; skin; MRI; PET; Polaris camera; SPECT imaging simulation; biochemical information; deformation; dynamic model; externally observable structure; functional image-guided therapies; functional information; human anatomy; internal organ motion; involuntary patient motion; lengthy acquisition times; motion compensation; nuclear medicine images; numerical model; optical motion tracking; passive marker; patient health condition; patient respiratory movement; radionuclide image blurring phenomena; realistic respiratory motion; respiratory-induced motion; skin; Biomedical optical imaging; Cameras; Character generation; Magnetic resonance imaging; Nuclear medicine; Optical imaging; Optical polarization; Positron emission tomography; Skin; Tracking;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2003 IEEE
ISSN
1082-3654
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8257-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NSSMIC.2003.1352424
Filename
1352424
Link To Document