DocumentCode :
1518957
Title :
Absolute activity quantitation from projections using an analytical approach: comparison with iterative methods in Tc-99m and I-123 brain SPECT
Author :
El Fakhri, G. ; Kijewski, M.F. ; Moore, S.C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Harvard Med. Sch., Boston, MA, USA
Volume :
48
Issue :
3
fYear :
2001
fDate :
6/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
768
Lastpage :
773
Abstract :
Estimates of SPECT activity within certain deep brain structures could be useful for clinical tasks such as early prediction of Alzheimer´s disease with Tc-99m or Parkinson´s disease with I-123; however, such estimates are biased by poor spatial resolution and inaccurate scatter and attenuation corrections. We compared an analytical approach (AA) of more accurate quantitation to a slower iterative approach (IA). Monte Carlo simulated projections of 12 normal and 12 pathologic Tc-99m perfusion studies, as well as 12, normal and 12 pathologic I-123 neurotransmission studies, were generated using a digital brain phantom and corrected for scatter by a multispectral fitting procedure. The AA included attenuation correction by a modified Metz-Fan algorithm and activity estimation by a technique that incorporated Metz filtering to compensate for variable collimator response (VCR), IA-modeled attenuation, and VCR in the projector/backprojector of an ordered subsets-expectation maximization (OSEM) algorithm. Bias and standard deviation over the 12 normal and 12 pathologic patients were calculated with respect to the reference values in the corpus callosum, caudate nucleus, and putamen. The IA and AA yielded similar quantitation results in both Tc-99m and I-123 studies in all brain structures considered in both normal and pathologic patients. The bias with respect to the reference activity distributions was less than 7% for Tc-99m studies, but greater than 30% for I-123 studies, due to partial volume effect in the striata. Our results were validated using I-123 physical acquisitions of an anthropomorphic brain phantom. The IA yielded quantitation accuracy comparable to that obtained with IA, while requiring much less processing time. However, in most conditions, IA yielded lower noise for the same bias than did AA
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; brain; diseases; image resolution; iterative methods; medical image processing; neurophysiology; single photon emission computed tomography; Alzheimer disease; I-123 brain SPECT; Metz filtering; Monte Carlo simulated projections; Parkinson disease; SPECT activity; Tc-99m brain SPECT; absolute activity quantitation; activity estimation; analytical approach; anthropomorphic brain phantom; attenuation corrections; bias; caudate nucleus; clinical tasks; corpus callosum; deep brain structures; digital brain phantom; early prediction; iterative methods; lower noise; modified Metz-Fan algorithm; more accurate quantitation; multispectral fitting procedure; normal I-123 neurotransmission studies; normal Tc-99m perfusion studies; ordered subsets-expectation maximization algorithm; partial volume effect; pathologic I-123 neurotransmission studies; pathologic Tc-99m perfusion studies; processing time; projections; projector/backprojector; putamen; quantitation accuracy; reference activity distributions; reference values; scatter corrections; slower iterative approach; spatial resolution; standard deviation; striata; variable collimator response; Alzheimer´s disease; Attenuation; Brain; Filtering algorithms; Imaging phantoms; Iterative methods; Parkinson´s disease; Scattering; Spatial resolution; Video recording;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/23.940161
Filename :
940161
Link To Document :
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