DocumentCode
2801884
Title
Measurement of the evoked vascular response (EVR) to cerebral activation due to vibro-tactile stimulation using gated 11C-CO PET acquisition
Author
Wang, B. ; Thompson, C.J. ; Reutens, D. ; Jolly, D. ; Meyer, E.
Volume
2
fYear
1997
fDate
9-15 Nov 1997
Firstpage
983
Abstract
Conventional positron emission tomography (PET) activation studies are performed using multiple injections of 15O water and subtraction of base-line from activation studies. These studies are acquired over 30 to 60 seconds and can be repeated every ten to 15 minutes, so their temporal resolution is poor. The authors report on a much more rapid technique to measure cerebral activation, with PET. In their first successful studies the subject inhaled a tracer quantity (750 MBq) of 11C carbon monoxide mixed in medical air. A pulsed vibrator taped to the fingers of the right hand provided a stimulus in 8 five-second phases (four on, four off) over a period of 20 minutes. PET images were acquired with a Scanditronix PC2048-15B, whose data acquisition system had been modified to allow cyclic acquisitions similar to gated cardiac studies. In a series of four subjects the evoked vascular response (EVR), was clearly identified When the subjects data is pooled a clear pattern of activation is easily seen, and the phase of the on-set is measurable. When analyzing the data from individual subjects we found the studies, with higher count-rates give the most conspicuous activation. It is anticipated that single-subject activation studies would yield improved image quality on a scanner capable of 3D acquisitions
Keywords
brain; mechanoception; positron emission tomography; 10 to 15 min; 20 min; 30 to 60 s; 3D acquisitions; 5 s; 750 MBq; 15O water; CO; Scanditronix PC2048-15B; base-line subtraction; cerebral activation; cyclic acquisitions; evoked vascular response; gated 11C-CO PET acquisition; medical diagnostic imaging; nuclear medicine; pulsed vibrator; single-subject activation studies; vibrotactile stimulation; Biomedical imaging; Brain; Data acquisition; Humans; Image quality; Magnetic resonance imaging; Phase measurement; Physics; Positron emission tomography; Time measurement;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Nuclear Science Symposium, 1997. IEEE
Conference_Location
Albuquerque, NM
ISSN
1082-3654
Print_ISBN
0-7803-4258-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NSSMIC.1997.670476
Filename
670476
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