Title :
High Resolution
I Pinhole SPECT Imaging of the Mouse Thyroid With the MediSPECT Small Animal CdTe Scanner
Author :
Mettivier, Giovanni ; Montesi, Maria Cristina ; Curion, Assunta Simona ; Lauria, Adele ; Marotta, Marcello ; Russo, Paolo
Author_Institution :
Dipt. di Sci. Fisiche, Univ. di Napoli Federico II, Naples, Italy
fDate :
6/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The first in vivo tomographic 125I imaging of the mouse thyroid carried out with the new MediSPECT small animal SPECT scanner is presented. The scanner is based on a fine pitch CdTe semiconductor pixel detector (14 × 14 mm2, 256 × 256 square pixel with a 55 m side) and equipped with a set of high resolution collimators. The collimation and detection units of the scanner are mounted on a gantry, rotating around a horizontal axis, along which is placed the small animal housing. In an in vivo test, the mouse was injected with a Na125 I solution having a total activity of 31.8 MBq. The planar projections for SPECT reconstruction were acquired with a 300 m pinhole (magnification 1.47 and field of view of 9.6 × 9.6 mm2). The projections were captured in a step-and-shoot fashion and were processed with an Ordered Subsets-Expectation Maximization reconstruction algorithm in order to obtain the SPECT images. Several 125I imaging tests have been made by using phantoms to assess the detector spatial resolution. The measured spatial resolution with a 300 m pinhole is about 0.5 mm in planar imaging and better than 1 mm in tomographic imaging.
Keywords :
biological organs; collimators; expectation-maximisation algorithm; image reconstruction; medical image processing; particle detectors; phantoms; single photon emission computed tomography; MediSPECT small animal SPECT scanner; collimators; fine pitch CdTe semiconductor pixel detector; high resolution 125I pinhole SPECT imaging; mouse thyroid; ordered subsets-expectation maximization reconstruction algorithm; phantoms; planar projections; radioactivity 31.8 MBq; spatial resolution; Animals; Collimators; Detectors; High-resolution imaging; Image resolution; In vivo; Mice; Spatial resolution; Testing; Tomography;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2010.2042815