Author_Institution :
Carleton Univ., Ottawa, Ont., Canada
Abstract :
Limited scanner resolution and cardiac motion contribute to partial volume (PV) averaging of positron emission tomography (PET) images. An extravascular (EV) density image, created from the subtraction of a blood pool (BP) from a transmission (TX) image can be used to estimate PV losses in the myocardium (MYO). A phantom emulating the left ventricle myocardium, with a variable wall thickness (5 mm to 25 mm), was used to characterize the method for use in 3-D PET 18FDG studies. At a myocardial thickness of 5 mm, 40% recovery of the activity was obtained. At myocardial thicknesses greater than 20 mm, full recovery was seen. Prior to EV image creation, the morphological operators dilation/erosion were applied to the BP and TX images to account for the presence of the phantom´s plastic walls, which would otherwise bias the EV values. Dividing MYO by the EV values improved the recovery to 95% at 5 mm, however, TX ring artifacts and the anisotropic nature of dilation/erosion contributed to errors in the EV image. Instead of using dilation/erosion, a second method, involving placement of adjusted ROIs on the BP and TX images was investigated. Use of these new EV values, as well as placement of the cardiac phantom in a chest phantom to reduce TX ring artifacts, allowed for 90% recovery of the activity at 5 mm. These results show that the EV density image can correct for PV averaging with 3-D PET over a range of myocardial thicknesses applicable to patient studies. However, in the thinnest regions, the method was found to be sensitive to errors in both the blood pool and transmission images.
Keywords :
cardiovascular system; image resolution; phantoms; positron emission tomography; 18F FDG; 3D PET 1S FDG studies; EV image creation; PET partial volume corrections; TX ring artifacts; blood pool; cardiac motion; cardiac phantom; chest phantom; extravascular density image; left ventricle myocardium; morphological operators dilation/erosion; partial volume averaging; phantom plastic walls; positron emission tomography images; resolution recovery; scanner resolution; transmission image; variable myocardial wall thicknesses; Anisotropic magnetoresistance; Blood; Hospitals; Image resolution; Imaging phantoms; Myocardium; Plastics; Positron emission tomography; Propagation losses; Spatial resolution; 18F FDG; extravascular density imaging; partial volume; positron emission tomography (PET); resolution recovery;