Title :
Improvement of myocardial perfusion defect severity quantitation in cardiac SPECT: A simulation study
Author :
Hughes, Tyler ; Shcherbinin, Sergey ; Celler, Anna
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
fDate :
Oct. 24 2009-Nov. 1 2009
Abstract :
We aim at improving the quantitative assessment of the severity of myocardial perfusion defects in cardiac SPECT imaging. The idea of a numerical heart template is utilized, which enables a patient specific measurement of defect severity as opposed to the more traditional population-based approaches. Using NCAT we developed three male thorax phantoms with different orientations and sizes of the left ventricle. Each heart contained a small (5%) inferior wall defect with a severity of 20-80%. The SimSET code was used to perform 21 simulations modeling cardiac SPECT acquisitions with a Tc-99m radiotracer, LEHR collimator, 64Ã64 matrix, and 60 camera stops. A conventional method (CM) of defect severity assessment included the MLEM reconstruction with 40 iterations and a calculation of the ratio, RCM, of the average activity concentrations in the defect and the normal heart. Our template method (TM) calculates a new ratio, RTM, which is a correction to RCM by rescaling it between two reference levels corresponding to a completely non-perfused defect and a healthy myocardium. These levels are calculated by projecting and reconstructing two numerical heart templates (may be based on CT in clinical studies) with activity ratios in defect to normal heart set to zero and unity, respectively. The proposed TM method was more accurate and more sensitive to small changes in defect severity than CM. While CM showed no defect (RCM was equal to 0.98-1.02) in the case with 20% severity (true ratio is 0.8), TM led to RTM values of 0.84-0.92. On average, our TM technique exhibited a 17% improvement in defect to normal ratios relative the CM method. Our proposed method offers a patient-specific assessment of perfusion defect severity in SPECT without the limitations intrinsic to traditional methodologies (e.g. extreme heart geometries).
Keywords :
cardiology; collimators; haemorheology; image reconstruction; medical image processing; phantoms; single photon emission computed tomography; 64Ã\x9764 matrix; LEHR collimator; MLEM reconstruction; SimSET code; Tc-99m radiotracer; activity ratios; cardiac SPECT imaging; conventional method; defect severity; heart; iterations; left ventricle; male thorax phantoms; myocardial perfusion defects; numerical heart template; patient specific measurement; patient-specific assessment; single-photon emission computed tomography; true ratio; Cameras; Collimators; Computed tomography; Geometry; Heart; Image databases; Imaging phantoms; Myocardium; Spatial databases; Thorax;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record (NSS/MIC), 2009 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3961-4
Electronic_ISBN :
1095-7863
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2009.5401640