Title :
Count-based quantitation of functional renal volume by SPECT imaging
Author :
King, M.A. ; Narayanan, M. ; Bohyer, C. ; Licho, R. ; Fung, L.C.T.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Nucl. Med., Massachusetts Univ. Med. Center, Worcester, MA, USA
fDate :
8/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The quantitation of absolute renal functional volume is of interest because many pathological processes are known to affect the growth and parenchymal volume of kidneys. Unlike thresholding and edge-detection methods, the count-based method of volume quantitation is not highly sensitive to boundary definition. In this investigation, count-based kidney volume quantitation was compared to that of fixed threshold-based estimation with and without including attenuation and scatter compensation in the reconstruction. The Alderson Organ Scanning Phantom kidneys were filled with a Tc-99m solution and placed in the Organ scanning phantom. Inserts shaped like the pelvis region of the kidneys were used to vary kidney volume. Emission imaging of the Tc-99m, and transmission imaging of a Gd-153 line source were performed by a triple-headed SPECT system. Without compensating for attenuation and scatter, the count-based method significantly under-estimated kidney volume. When attenuation and scatter compensation were included, count-based volume quantitation was more accurate than volume estimation with a fixed threshold adapted to the image acquisition and reconstruction strategies employed
Keywords :
kidney; medical image processing; single photon emission computed tomography; volume measurement; Gd; Gd-153 line source; SPECT imaging; Tc; Tc-99m solution; attenuation compensation; count-based quantitation; emission imaging; functional renal volume; image acquisition strategy; kidney growth; kidney parenchymal volume; medical diagnostic imaging; nuclear medicine; pathological processes; reconstruction strategy; scatter compensation; transmission imaging; triple-headed SPECT system; Attenuation; Diseases; Image reconstruction; Imaging phantoms; Magnetic resonance imaging; Nuclear medicine; Pathological processes; Scattering; Tomography; Volume measurement;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on