Title :
Optimizing collimator resolution/sensitivity in SPECT iterative reconstruction
Author :
Strologas, John ; Metzler, Scott ; Xiaofen Zheng ; Wei Chang
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol. & Nucl. Med., Rush Univ. Med. Center, Chicago, IL, USA
fDate :
Oct. 27 2013-Nov. 2 2013
Abstract :
We present a simulations study of the collimator sensitivity/resolution compromise as it affects the image quality of hot lesions in SPECT iterative reconstruction. We investigate three parallel-beam hexagonal-hole collimators with resolution in the center of the field of view equal to 11 mm, 15 mm, and 19 mm. We scan the Esser hot-rod phantom with 60 views and we reconstruct the images using MLEM iterative reconstruction with no regularization or filtering. As the image-quality figure of merit we use the reconstructed-image contrast vs noise. We repeat the study for three levels of object-contrast (2.3, 4, and 9). We conclude that the higher-sensitivity collimator (15-mm in resolution) offers an improvement (lower noise for same contrast or higher contrast for same noise) in the reconstruction of medium-sized lesions (12-mm and 16-mm), at medium to low contrasts (4, 2.3). At high contrast (9) and low lesions sizes (8-mm) the higher resolution (11-mm) collimator is still favorable. The conclusions are task-dependent, and apply to hot lesions of the particular sizes and contrasts. Similar studies can be performed to address a range of realistic clinical problems. We intend to repeat this study for cold lesions in a cardiac anthropomorphic phantom.
Keywords :
cardiology; collimators; diseases; image denoising; image reconstruction; iterative methods; medical image processing; phantoms; single photon emission computed tomography; Esser hot-rod phantom; MLEM iterative reconstruction; SPECT iterative reconstruction; cardiac anthropomorphic phantom; high-sensitivity collimator; hot lesions; image-quality figure of merit; noise; object-contrast levels; optimizing collimator resolution-sensitivity; parallel-beam hexagonal-hole collimators; reconstructed-image contrast; Collimators; Image reconstruction; Image resolution; Lesions; Noise; Phantoms; GATE; Monte Carlo simulations; SPECT; collimators; iterative image reconstruction; tomographic imaging;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference (NSS/MIC), 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Seoul
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0533-1
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2013.6829199