Title :
A positron emission tomograph designed for 3/4 mm resolution
Author :
McIntyre, J.A. ; Allen, R.D. ; Aguiar, J. ; Paulson, J.T.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX, USA
fDate :
30 Oct-5 Nov 1994
Abstract :
Two factors of the design for a positron tomograph affect the magnitude of the tomograph spatial resolution: the gamma ray detector width and the analogue measurement of the scintillator location. In the tomograph design reported here the analogue measurement is eliminated and the detector transaxial width factor is reduced to 3/4 mm. The analogue measurement is eliminated by transmitting the scintillation light from each individual scintillator through optical fibers to four photomultipliers (PMT´s); the identities of the PMT´s then provide a digital address for the scintillation location. Plastic scintillators are used to provide enough scintillation light for transmission through the optical fibers. Bonuses from the use of plastic scintillators are first, the reduction of the scintillator dead time to about 10 nsec, second, a large reduction of crosstalk between neighboring scintillators, third, the reduction of resolution loss from off-axis gamma rays and, fourth, the ability to sample the axial image at one-eighth the axial resolution distance of 2.5 mm. The designed tomograph incorporates 20 rings. Two of the 32 tomograph 20-ring modules have been constructed to measure the resolution and other characteristics of the tomograph
Keywords :
biomedical equipment; photomultipliers; positron emission tomography; scintillation; 10 ns; 2.5 mm; analogue measurement; axial image sampling; detector transaxial width factor; diagnostic nuclear medicine; digital address; gamma ray detector width; medical instrumentation; off-axis gamma rays; optical fibers; photomultipliers; plastic scintillators; positron emission tomograph design; resolution loss reduction; scintillation light transmission; scintillator dead time reduction; scintillator location; tomograph spatial resolution; Gamma ray detectors; Image resolution; Incentive schemes; Optical fibers; Photomultipliers; Plastics; Positrons; Radioactive decay; Solid scintillation detectors; Spatial resolution;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference, 1994., 1994 IEEE Conference Record
Conference_Location :
Norfolk, VA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2544-3
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.1994.474631