Title :
Assessment of coregistration of PET H215O images in the abdomen using digital phantoms
Author :
Livieratos, L. ; Meikle, Steven R. ; Matthews, J.C. ; Bailey, D.L. ; Jones, T. ; Price, P.
Author_Institution :
MRC Cyclotron Unit, Hammersmith Hosp., London, UK
Abstract :
The aim of this study was to investigate the performance of PET-to-PET coregistration of abdominal H215O blood flow images from different sessions (before and after anti-cancer treatment) on the same subject. Due to the application-specific nature of image registration methodology, the use of preexisting techniques for new applications requires validation. A quantitative approach was developed based on the Zubal segmented human anatomical phantom in conjunction with blood flow biodistribution data to simulate the activity distribution of a typical PET flow study. Known rotations and translations were applied to the resulting flow software phantom. Poisson noise and spatial resolution of the PET scanner were included in the sinograms created by forward-projection and the reconstructed images were coregistered against a non-transformed reference image using three existing methods: minimisation of standard deviation in the pixel ratio (SPR), multi-resolution maximisation of mutual information (MMI), and K-means variance minimisation (CVM). Assessment based on the transformation matrices shows comparable performance in the range of the transformations assessed (0-15° rotations, 0-15 pixels translations). Assessment based on correlation, residual image and ROI-based results suggest an advantage of MMI for the specific application considered
Keywords :
blood flow measurement; image registration; image resolution; medical image processing; positron emission tomography; H2O; K-means variance minimisation; PET-to-PET coregistration; Poisson noise; Zubal segmented human anatomical phantom; abdominal H215O blood flow images; anticancer treatment; digital phantoms; flow software phantom; medical diagnostic imaging; multiresolution mutual information maximisation; nuclear medicine; pixel ratio standard deviation minimization; reconstructed images; residual image; rotations; sinograms; spatial resolution; transformation matrices; translations; Abdomen; Application software; Bioinformatics; Blood flow; Humans; Image registration; Image segmentation; Imaging phantoms; Minimization methods; Positron emission tomography;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium, 1997. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Albuquerque, NM
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4258-5
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.1997.670519