Title :
A microvolumetric /spl beta/ blood counter for pharmacokinetic PET studies in small animals
Author :
Convert, L. ; Morin-Brassard, G. ; Cadorette, J. ; Rouleau, D. ; Croteau, E. ; Archambault, M. ; Fontaine, R. ; Lecomte, R.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Nucl. Medicine & Radiobiology, Sherbrooke Univ., Que.
Abstract :
Radiotracer kinetic modeling in small animals with positron emission tomography (PET) requires the determination of the blood tracer concentration as a function of time. A continuous blood counting system was designed to measure the input function from rats and mice in real time. The system consists of a flow-through beta counter made of silicon PIN photodiodes and a mul syringe pump. The latter draws blood continuously from an implanted venous or arterial catheter, at a user selected rate. The direct beta+ detection by photodiodes minimizes the shield footprint next to the animal and reduces the counter sensitivity to ambient gamma radiation. The device is entirely remote controlled for sampling protocol selection, tuning and real time monitoring of measured parameters. It can be hooked to a computer or fully integrated with the LabPETtrade scanner for blood counting during dynamic PET imaging experiments. The counter sensitivity to the most popular PET radioisotopes (18F, 64Cu, 13N, 11 C) ranges from 9 plusmn 1.5 to 30 plusmn 2.3 cps/(kBq/mul). Its linearity is better than 99% up to 63 kBq/mul, and the dispersion is 1.9 s at a rate of 250 mul/min with rat heparinized whole blood and PE10 catheter. Due to its optimized mechanical design and compact shielding, the counter sensitivity to radioactive background is only 5 cps for a 37 MBq 18F source 10 cm away from the detector. Accurate time-activity curves have been obtained from rats and mice in dynamic PET imaging studies
Keywords :
blood; catheters; positron emission tomography; LabPET scanner; PE10 catheter; ambient gamma radiation; arterial catheter; blood counting; blood counting system; compact shielding; counter sensitivity; direct beta+ detection; emission tomography; flow-through beta counter; implanted venous; mice; microvolumetric beta blood counter; optimized mechanical design; pharmacokinetic PET studies; radiotracer kinetic modeling; rat heparinized whole blood; rats; sampling protocol selection; silicon PIN photodiodes; small animals; time-activity curves; tracer concentration; Animals; Blood; Catheters; Counting circuits; Kinetic theory; Mice; Positron emission tomography; Radiation detectors; Rats; Real time systems;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2005 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Fajardo
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9221-3
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2005.1596887