• DocumentCode
    1294491
  • Title

    Scatter correction techniques in 3D PET: a Monte Carlo evaluation

  • Author

    Castiglioni, I. ; Cremonesi, O. ; Gilardi, MC ; Bettinardi, V. ; Rizzo, G. ; Savi, A. ; Bellotti, E. ; Fazio, F.

  • Author_Institution
    INB-CNR, Milan Univ., Italy
  • Volume
    46
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    1999
  • Firstpage
    2053
  • Lastpage
    2058
  • Abstract
    In this work, a Monte Carlo software package, PET-EGS, designed to simulate realistic PET clinical studies, was used to assess three different approaches to scatter correction in 3D PET: analytical (gaussian fitting technique), experimental (dual energy window technique) and probabilistic (Monte Carlo technique). Phantom and clinical studies were carried out by 3D PET and simulated by PET-EGS. A clinical study (/sup 18/F-FDG brain study) was simulated assuming PET emission/transmission multiple-volume images as a voxelised source object describing the distribution of both the radioactivity and attenuation coefficients and accounting for out-of-field activity and media. The accuracy of PET-EGS in modelling the physical response of a 3D PET scanner was assessed by statistical comparison between measured and total (scatter+unscatter) simulated distributions (probability for the two distributions to be the same distribution: p>0.95). The accuracy of the scatter models, for each scatter correction technique, was evaluated on sinograms by statistical comparison between the estimated and the simulated scatter distributions (agreement <1 /spl sigma/). The accuracy of scatter correction was evaluated on sinograms by comparison between scatter corrected and simulated unscatter distributions, proving a comparable accuracy of all the considered scatter correction techniques for brainlike distributed sources.
  • Keywords
    Monte Carlo methods; brain models; gamma-ray scattering; medical image processing; positron emission tomography; software packages; /sup 18/F-FDG brain study; 3D PET; F; Monte Carlo evaluation; PET emission/transmission multiple-volume images; brainlike distributed sources; clinical studies; dual energy window technique; gaussian fitting technique; medical diagnostic imaging; nuclear medicine; scatter correction techniques; statistical comparison; voxelised source object; Analytical models; Attenuation; Brain modeling; Imaging phantoms; Monte Carlo methods; Positron emission tomography; Probability; Scattering; Software design; Software packages;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9499
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/23.819282
  • Filename
    819282