Title :
Collimator blurring reduction method using fine angular sampling projection data in SPECT
Author :
Motomura, Nobutoku ; Nambu, Kyojiro ; Kojima, Akihiro ; Tomiguchi, Seiji ; Ogawa, Koichi
Author_Institution :
Med. Syst. Res. & Dev. Dept., Toshiba, Tochigi, Japan
fDate :
6/23/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Due to the collimator aperture, the spatial resolution of SPECT data varies with source-to-detector distance. Since radius of detector rotation is bigger when scanning larger patients, the spatial resolution is degraded in these cases. Emitted gamma rays travel not only along the central axis of the collimator hole but also off-axis due to collimator aperture. However, an off-axis ray at one angle would be a central-axis ray at another angle; therefore, raw projection data at one angle can be thought of as an ensemble of central-axis rays collected from a small arc equal to collimator aperture. Thus, fine angular sampling can compensate for collimator blurring. By using sampling pitch of less than half the collimator aperture angle, compensation was performed by subtracting the weighted sum of the projection data from the raw projection data. Collimator geometry and detector rotation radius determined the weighting function. A cylindrical phantom with four different-sized rods and torso phantom for Tl-201 cardiac SPECT simulation were used for evaluation. Aperture angle of the collimator was 7 degrees. Projection sampling pitch was 2 degrees. In both phantom studies, the proposed method showed improvement in contrast and reduction of partial volume effect, thereby indicating that the proposed method can compensate adequately for image blurring caused by collimator aperture
Keywords :
angular correlation techniques; beam handling equipment; cardiology; diagnostic radiography; gamma-ray detection; radiation monitoring; single photon emission computed tomography; 201Tl; SPECT; cardiac SPECT simulation; central-axis rays; collimator aperture; collimator blurring reduction method; collimator geometry; detector rotation; fine angular sampling projection data; gamma ray emission; partial volume effect; phantom studies; rotation radius; source-to-detector distance; torso phantom; weighting function; Apertures; Collimators; Degradation; Detectors; Gamma rays; Geometry; Imaging phantoms; Sampling methods; Spatial resolution; Torso;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2001 IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7324-3
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2001.1009246