Title :
Using linear time-invariant system theory to estimate kinetic parameters directly from projection measurements
Author :
Zeng, Gengsheng L. ; Gullberg, Grant T. ; Huesman, Ronald H.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Utah Univ., Salt Lake City, UT, USA
fDate :
12/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
It is common practice to estimate kinetic parameters from dynamically acquired tomographic data by first reconstructing a dynamic sequence of three-dimensional reconstructions and then fitting the parameters to time activity curves generated from the time-varying reconstructed images. However, in SPECT, the pharmaceutical distribution can change during the acquisition of a complete tomographic data set, which can bias the estimated kinetic parameters. It is hypothesized that more accurate estimates of the kinetic parameters can be obtained by fitting to the projection measurements instead of the reconstructed time sequence. Estimation from projections requires the knowledge of their relationship between the tissue regions of interest or voxels with particular kinetic parameters and the projection measurements, which results in a complicated nonlinear estimation problem with a series of exponential factors with multiplicative coefficients. A technique is presented in this paper where the exponential decay parameters are estimated separately using linear time-invariant system theory. Once the exponential factors are known, the coefficients of the exponentials can be estimated using linear estimation techniques. Computer simulations demonstrate that estimation of the kinetic parameters directly from the projections is more accurate than the estimation from the reconstructed images
Keywords :
image reconstruction; single photon emission computed tomography; 3D reconstructions; SPECT; computer simulations; dynamic sequence reconstruction; dynamically acquired tomographic data; exponential decay parameters; exponential factors; kinetic parameters; linear estimation techniques; linear time-invariant system theory; multiplicative coefficients; nonlinear estimation problem; pharmaceutical distribution; projection measurements; reconstructed time sequence; single photon emission computed tomography; time activity curves; time-varying reconstructed images; tissue regions; voxels; Computer simulation; Curve fitting; Estimation theory; Image reconstruction; Kinetic theory; Parameter estimation; Particle measurements; Pharmaceuticals; Time measurement; Tomography;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on