Title :
Pinhole SPECT of mice using the LumaGEM gamma camera
Author :
MacDonald, Lawrence R. ; Patt, Bradley E. ; Iwanczyk, Jan S. ; Tsui, Benjamin M W ; Wang, Yuchuan ; Frey, Eric C. ; Wessell, Daniel E. ; Acton, Paul D. ; Kung, Hank F.
Author_Institution :
Gamma Med. Instrum. Div., Photon Imaging Inc., Northridge, CA, USA
fDate :
6/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
LumaGEM is a newly developed gamma camera for dedicated, small field of view, high spatial resolution imaging. The system consists of an array of 2×2×6 mm3 NaI(Tl) pixels coupled to an array of position-sensitive photomultiplier tubes. It has a 125×125 mm2 field of view. A pinhole collimator was used on LumaGEM to acquire SPECT images of mice that had transgenic modifications so as to model various diseases. Pinhole apertures of 1, 2 and 3 mm are interchangeable on the collimator and were used to acquire images. An iterative MLEM algorithm for pinhole SPECT was used to reconstruct the 128 projection images that covered 360° rotation. The reconstruction algorithm is based on a projector and backprojector pair implemented using a ray-tracing algorithm. The crucial reconstruction input parameters are the radius of rotation, center of rotation, and pinhole focal length. Ideal pinhole geometry is assumed, and no correction for attenuation has been made. The preliminary images presented here show detailed uptake in the mice subjects and are a convincing sign that animal SPECT can reach submillimeter spatial resolution and be a valuable tool in the study of diseases and the development of pharmaceuticals in animal models
Keywords :
biological techniques; cameras; gamma-ray detection; image reconstruction; image resolution; iterative methods; photomultipliers; single photon emission computed tomography; LumaGEM gamma camera; NaI(Tl) pixels array; NaI:Tl; attenuation correction; dedicated small field of view high spatial resolution imaging; disease models; iterative MLEM algorithm; mice; pharmaceuticals development; pinhole SPECT; projector/backprojector pair; ray-tracing algorithm; rotation center; rotation radius; submillimeter spatial resolution; transgenic modifications; Animals; Cameras; Collimators; Diseases; High-resolution imaging; Image reconstruction; Iterative algorithms; Mice; Optical imaging; Spatial resolution;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on