DocumentCode :
3534241
Title :
Feasibility study of the quantitative corrections for the brain input function imaging from the carotid artery images by an ultra-high resolution dedicated brain PET
Author :
Zhang, Yuxuan ; Li, Hongdi ; Baghaei, Hossain ; Liu, Shitao ; Ramirez, Rocio ; An, Shaohui ; Wang, Chao ; Wong, Wai-Hoi
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA
fYear :
2010
fDate :
Oct. 30 2010-Nov. 6 2010
Firstpage :
2954
Lastpage :
2956
Abstract :
Quantitative PET imaging usually requires the arterial blood sampling, which is an invasive measure and may introduce risks or other complications to patients. People are trying several non-invasive methods to obtain the quantitative tracer concentrations by measuring the reconstructed intensity of the artery in the PET imaging. However, all these methods have certain limitations for brain study due to difficulties such as the partial-volume-effect (PVE), no artery big enough in the FOV for obtaining the required data as the cardiology does, etc. Here we carried a simulation study on the feasibility of the quantitative corrections by carotid artery with an ultra-high resolution, large axial FOV dedicated brain PET system. This brain PET has a detector ring diameter of 48 cm and the axial length of 25 cm. The large AFOV ensures that the camera could cover both the brain and the carotid artery region at the same time for dynamic study. The detectors are the 1.4×1.4×11 mm3 LYSO crystals. The conservative estimation of the resolution is 1.7 to 2.0 mm, which is about 1/3 of the human carotid artery inner diameter. To evaluate the PVE on the quantitative results, a head-and-neck phantom with different-sized sources (5 to 20 mm) embedded that has a 6:1 concentration ratio between source and background is studied using Monte Carlo simulations. As the comparison, a whole-body PET - Siemens TruePoint scanner is also studied. From the reconstructed source intensities we find that with this brain PET, the recovery coefficient could reach 76% to 86% for a typical human carotid artery size source with the diameter between 5 to 7 mm; with the TruePoint scanner the recovery coefficient is only 34% to 54%. The simulation shows that with the help of an ultra-high resolution large axial FOV brain PET camera, the goal of non-invasive quantitative corrections by carotid artery for the brain dynamic study is feasible, which is not possible with other commercial- - whole-body scanners current available.
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; biological organs; blood vessels; brain; cardiology; image reconstruction; medical image processing; neurophysiology; phantoms; positron emission tomography; Monte Carlo simulation; arterial blood sampling; brain PET; brain input function imaging; cardiology; carotid artery imaging; commercial whole-body scanners; detector ring; head phantom; human carotid artery size source; image reconstruction; neck phantom; noninvasive quantitative corrections; partial-volume-effect; quantitative PET imaging; quantitative tracer concentrations; size 25 cm; size 48 cm; size 5 mm to 7 mm; ultrahigh resolution; whole-body PET-siemens truepoint scanner; Cameras; Carotid arteries; Detectors; Image reconstruction; Image resolution; Positron emission tomography;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record (NSS/MIC), 2010 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Knoxville, TN
ISSN :
1095-7863
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9106-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2010.5874337
Filename :
5874337
Link To Document :
بازگشت