Title :
Wireless Synchronization of a Multi-Pinhole Small Animal SPECT Collimation Device With a Clinical Scanner
Author :
DiFilippo, Frank P. ; Patel, Sagar
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Nucl. Med., Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH
fDate :
6/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A multi-pinhole collimation device for small animal single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) uses the gamma camera detectors of a standard clinical SPECT scanner. The collimator and animal bed move independently of the detectors, and therefore their motions must be synchronized. One approach is manual triggering of the SPECT acquisition simultaneously with a programmed motion sequence for the device. However, some data blurring and loss of image quality result, and true electronic synchronization is preferred. An off-the-shelf digital gyroscope with integrated Bluetooth interface provides a wireless solution to device synchronization. The sensor attaches to the SPECT gantry and reports its rotational speed to a notebook computer controlling the device. Software processes the rotation data in real-time, averaging the signal and issuing triggers while compensating for baseline drift. Motion commands are sent to the collimation device with minimal delay, within approximately 0.5 second of the start of SPECT gantry rotation. Test scans of a point source demonstrate an increase in true counts and a reduction in background counts compared to manual synchronization. The wireless rotation sensor provides robust synchronization of the collimation device with the clinical SPECT scanner and enhances image quality.
Keywords :
Bluetooth; cameras; collimators; gamma-ray apparatus; gyroscopes; medical image processing; synchronisation; wireless channels; clinical scanner; digital gyroscope; electronic synchronization; gamma camera detectors; image quality; integrated Bluetooth interface; multipinhole small animal collimation device; single photon emission computed tomography; wireless rotation sensor; wireless synchronization; Animals; Cameras; Gamma ray detection; Gamma ray detectors; Gyroscopes; Image quality; Motion detection; Optical collimators; Single photon emission computed tomography; Wireless sensor networks; Single photon emission computed tomography; small animal; synchronization; wireless;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2009.2018843