Title :
Acquisition and Processing Methods for a Bedside Cardiac SPECT Imaging System
Author :
Studenski, Matthew T. ; Gilland, David R. ; Cebula, Alan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Nucl. & Radiol. Eng., Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
Abstract :
We have developed a compact and mobile gamma imaging system that is designed for both PET and SPECT acquisitions within a bedside environment, such as an intensive care unit, surgical suite, or emergency room. This paper describes the SPECT performance evaluation of the system for cardiac imaging, including both Tc-99m and F-18 radionuclides. For cardiac F-18 imaging in a bedside environment, the 511 keV SPECT approach using high energy collimation and anterior 180 degree acquisition has the advantages of not requiring a detector to be positioned beneath the bed and greatly reducing attenuation effects. In this study, we evaluated SPECT reconstructed image quality using an anthropomorphic dynamic cardiac phantom filled with Tc-99m and F-18 separately. The specific issues that were addressed in this study included the following: 1) mitigating septal penetration effects with the 511 keV photons using de-convolution filtering, 2) reducing truncation effects due to the relatively small field-of-view of the camera using angle-dependent center-of-rotation shifts, and 3) investigating the effects of reduced angular sampling and angular range. We found that reducing angular sampling to 28 projections through 135 degrees with Tc-99m and 25 projections through 180 degrees with F-18 showed all features of the myocardium.
Keywords :
collimators; image reconstruction; medical image processing; phantoms; positron emission tomography; single photon emission computed tomography; PET acquisition; anthropomorphic dynamic cardiac phantom; bedside cardiac SPECT imaging system; deconvolution filtering; high energy collimation; image quality; image reconstruction; mobile gamma imaging system; myocardium; positron emission tomography; Anthropomorphism; Attenuation; Collimators; Detectors; Image quality; Image reconstruction; Optical imaging; Positron emission tomography; Sampling methods; Surgery; Cardiac imaging; image processing; mobile PET; mobile SPECT;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2009.2038157