Title :
Angular viewing time optimization for slit-slat SPECT
Author :
Xiaofen Zheng ; Metzler, Scott D.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
fDate :
Oct. 27 2012-Nov. 3 2012
Abstract :
In current SPECT systems, gamma cameras rotate around the subject sampling for the same fixed amount of time at each viewing angle. We suggest that adapting angular viewing time for specific tasks may help to maximize the instrument performance without increasing imaging time. Using a slit-slat collimator as an example, we tested a variety of angular viewing time settings and examined the contrast of hot lesions with various activity concentration at a few locations and proposed a linear model of the locations and angular viewing time near region of interest (ROI) for off-center lesion. Given a fixed scan time, viewing time t at a viewing angle φ can be adjusted as a function of φ for different phantom sizes and ROI locations. In our current framework, viewing time t at viewing angle φ is parameterized as: t(φ) = k(1 + ta cos(φ φo))n + Δt, where ta and n control the proportion of the viewing time at φo and the rate of change around it, φo is the viewing angle closest to the ROI so that viewing time peaks at this angle, k is a normalizer and Δt is the scout scan time per viewing angle. Scans using various parameters over 20 viewing angles of 200 and 600 second total scan time on 2 phantoms were simulated. Poisson noise was added to projection data to create 500 noisy realizations for every angular viewing time configuration. The performance was evaluated based on the average contrast at a matched noise ratio in reconstructions using a maximum likelihood expectation maximization algorithm. These preliminary results show that optimizing the viewing time in angles near the ROI location can increase detectability in off-center ROIs. Our preliminary investigation shows that the optimized viewing time near the ROI follows a linear trend with the location of the ROI. This simplified model can be easily used in SPECT applications.
Keywords :
cameras; expectation-maximisation algorithm; gamma-ray apparatus; maximum likelihood estimation; optical collimators; positron emission tomography; Poisson noise; ROI locations; activity concentration; angular viewing time optimization; angular viewing time settings; fixed scan time; gamma cameras; hot lesion contrast; instrument performance; matched noise ratio; maximum likelihood expectation maximization algorithm; off-center ROI; phantom sizes; projection data; region of interest; slit-slat SPECT systems; slit-slat collimator; SPECT; slit-slat collimator; view time;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference (NSS/MIC), 2012 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Anaheim, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2028-3
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2012.6551805