Title :
A proposed method for correcting aperture penetration in high energy slit aperture and pinhole SPECT
Author :
Wrobel, M.C. ; Clinthorne, N.H. ; Fessler, J.A. ; Zhang, Y. ; Wilderman, S.J. ; Rogers, W.L.
Author_Institution :
AL/OEBZ, Brooks AFB, TX, USA
fDate :
8/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Aperture penetration in high energy pinhole and slit aperture SPECT results in a decrease of both resolution and contrast. At 511 keV, approximately 50% of projection counts can be attributed to penetration. Correction for this effect by measuring the penetration from a “blocked” slit has been investigated using SPRINT-II. Slit apertures were blocked with small bars of depleted uranium (DU) and projections acquired to serve as an estimate of the penetration background. The block´s finite size and DU´s limited attenuation of 511 keV photons required the blocked projection data to be corrected by a spatially variant, Monte Carlo based window function. 18F line sources imaged without correction for penetration had an 8.8 mm FWHM and 18 mm FWTM due to large penetration tails. Lines reconstructed with penetration correction achieved 5.0 mm FWHM and 8.6 mm FWTM resolution. An 18F filled μ-Jaszczak phantom (hot lines from 1.5 mm to 4 mm) imaged without correction produced a barely discernible 4 mm line send uniform background. Images produced with correction produced clear images of 3 mm holes with negligible background The findings should be generally applicable to clinical gamma camera systems
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; gamma-ray detection; image reconstruction; image resolution; medical image processing; single photon emission computed tomography; 511 keV; 18F filled μ-Jaszczak phantom; 18F line sources; DU limited attenuation; F; SPRINT-II; aperture penetration correction; blocked slit; clinical gamma camera systems; contrast; depleted uranium bars; high energy slit aperture SPECT; hot lines; large penetration tails; penetration background; pinhole SPECT; projection counts; projections; resolution; small animal imaging; spatially variant Monte Carlo based window function; Apertures; Attenuation; Bars; Energy resolution; Image reconstruction; Imaging phantoms; Monte Carlo methods; Single photon emission computed tomography; Spatial resolution; Tail;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on