DocumentCode :
1276374
Title :
Investigation of MR-Based Attenuation Correction and Motion Compensation for Hybrid PET/MR
Author :
Buerger, Christian ; Tsoumpas, Charalampos ; Aitken, Andrew ; King, Andrew Peter ; Schleyer, Paul ; Schulz, Volkmar ; Marsden, Paul K. ; Schaeffter, Tobias
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., King´´s Coll. London, London, UK
Volume :
59
Issue :
5
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
1967
Lastpage :
1976
Abstract :
In hybrid PET/MR systems, attenuation maps can be derived from MR to correct for attenuation in PET. However, MR-based attenuation correction (AC) in abdominal applications remains challenging (i) because of poor signal from important tissue types in common MR sequences (e.g., cortical bone) and (ii) because of respiratory motion which results in misalignments between the derived attenuation maps and the PET emissions. Furthermore, respiratory motion also leads to motion-blurring artefacts in the final PET reconstructions. In this paper, we compute an MR-based 4D attenuation map including cortical bone by combining an Ultrashort Echo Time (UTE) acquisition with a subject-specific motion model derived from a second near real-time 3D MR image acquisition. This model allows us to create attenuation maps at any respiratory position which are used for AC in the reconstruction of different respiratory resolved PET images. The inverse of the model is used for motion compensation (MC) of these images. We demonstrate our approach on MR data from 5 healthy volunteers including 3 manually inserted artificial lesions. The impact of bone tissue and respiratory motion on AC is investigated in PET simulations (i) by misclassifying bone to soft tissue in the attenuation maps leading to errors of up to 26.0% in mean uptake for lesions close to bone, and (ii) by using a non-moving attenuation map leading to errors of up to 24.2%. The impact of respiratory motion on MC showed errors of up to 50.7% in areas of strong motion if MC was not performed. The results show that the effect of motion has to be considered both for attenuation correction and for motion-compensating PET emissions. This additive effect of motion is larger than the effect of a wrong AC.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; bone; data acquisition; image reconstruction; image restoration; image sequences; medical image processing; motion compensation; positron emission tomography; MRI sequences; MRI-based 4D attenuation map; MRI-based attenuation correction; PET reconstructions; abdominal applications; bone tissue; cortical bone; hybrid PET-MRI systems; manually inserted artificial lesions; motion compensation; motion-blurring artefacts; respiratory position; second near real-time 3D MR image acquisition; subject-specific motion model; ultrashort echo time; Attenuation; Bones; Computed tomography; Image reconstruction; Lesions; Logic gates; Positron emission tomography; Attenuation correction; MR; PET simulation; cortical bone; motion correction; motion model; ultrashort echo time;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2012.2209127
Filename :
6290422
Link To Document :
بازگشت