DocumentCode
462677
Title
Fast Monte Carlo Simulation Based Joint Iterative Reconstruction for Simultaneous 99mTc/123I Brain SPECT Imaging
Author
Ouyang, Jinsong ; Fakhri, Georges El ; Moore, Stephen C. ; Kijewski, Marie F.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Radiol., Harvard Med. Sch., Boston, MA
Volume
4
fYear
2006
fDate
Oct. 29 2006-Nov. 1 2006
Firstpage
2251
Lastpage
2256
Abstract
Simultaneous 99mTc/123I SPECT allows assessment of two functions under identical physiological conditions. Separation of these isotopes is difficult, however, because their energies are close. Most correction methods do not fully model either physical effects or patient-specific activity and attenuation distributions, and often reject scattered photons, rather than using the information they carry. We have developed a fast Monte Carlo (MC) simulation-based multiple-isotope and multiple-energy joint ordered-subset expectation maximization (JOSEM) iterative reconstruction algorithm, MC-JOSEM, that simultaneously corrects for scatter and crosstalk. We evaluated MC-JOSEM for simultaneous brain perfusion (99mTc-HMPAO) and neurotransmission (123I-altropane) SPECT. MC simulations of 99mTc and 123I studies were generated separately and then combined to mimic simultaneous 99mTc/123I SPECT. All details of photon transport through the brain, the collimator, and detector, including Compton and coherent scatter, septal penetration and backscatter from components behind the crystal, were modeled. We reconstructed images from simultaneous dual-isotope projections in two ways. First, we reconstructed the photopeak-energy-window projections (with an asymmetric energy window for 123I) using the standard ordered subsets expectation maximization algorithm (AW-OSEM). Second, we reconstructed the 3-energy-window projections using a MC based iterative reconstruction that we have developed (MC-JOSEM). After fifteen iterations of reconstruction of 99mTc images, root mean square errors (RMSE) of activity estimates in several brain structures from MC-JOSEM were reduced by 79-94% compared to AW-OSEM in the thalamus, striata, white matter, and gray matter. Similarly, RMSE of activity estimates from 123I images reconstructed by fifteen iterations of MC-JOSEM were reduced by 30- -58% compared to AW-OSEM in the striata and background.
Keywords
Monte Carlo methods; brain; image reconstruction; iodine; isotopes; iterative methods; medical image processing; neurophysiology; single photon emission computed tomography; technetium; 123I grain; 123I-altropane SPECT; 99mT grain; 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT; AW-OSEM; Compton scattering; MC-JOSEM iterative reconstruction algorithm; SPECT imaging; backscatter; brain perfusion; coherent scattering; dual-isotope projection; fast Monte Carlo simulation; gray matter; image reconstruction; joint iterative reconstruction; joint ordered-subset expectation maximization; neurotransmission; ordered subsets expectation maximization; patient-specific activity; photon transport; septal penetration; striata; thalamus; white matter; Attenuation; Brain modeling; Electromagnetic scattering; Image reconstruction; Isotopes; Monte Carlo methods; Particle scattering; Photonic crystals; Reconstruction algorithms; Single photon emission computed tomography;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2006. IEEE
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA
ISSN
1095-7863
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0560-2
Electronic_ISBN
1095-7863
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NSSMIC.2006.354362
Filename
4179476
Link To Document