Title :
Realistic Monte Carlo simulation of Ga-67 SPECT imaging
Author :
Moore, Stephen C. ; El Fakhri, Georges
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Harvard Med. Sch., Boston, MA, USA
fDate :
6/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Describes a comprehensive Monte Carlo program tailored for efficient simulation of realistic Ga-67 SPECT imaging through the entire range of photon emission energies. The authors´ approach incorporates several new features developed by them and by others. It is now being used to optimize and evaluate the performance of various methods of compensating for photon scatter, attenuation, and nonstationary distance- and energy-dependent detector resolution. Improvements include (1) the use of a numerical torso phantom with accurate organ source and attenuation maps obtained by segmenting CT images of a Radiology Support Devices anthropormorphic heart/thorax phantom, modified to include eight axillary lymph nodes; (2) accelerated photon propagation through the attenuator using a variant of the maximum rectangular region algorithm of Suganuma and Ogawa (1999); and (3) improved variance reduction using modified spatial sampling for simulation of large-angle collimator penetration, scatter and lead X-rays. Very-high-count projections were simulated in 55 energy windows spaced irregularly in the range 60-370 keV; these essentially noise-free images were used as a basis for generating Poisson noise realizations characteristic of 72-h postinjection Ga-67 studies. Comparisons of spatial and energy distributions demonstrated good agreement between data experimentally measured from the RSD phantom and those simulated from the mathematical segmentation of the same phantom
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; gallium; single photon emission computed tomography; 60 to 370 keV; 72 h; Ga; Ga-67 SPECT imaging; Radiology Support Devices anthropormorphic heart/thorax phantom; accelerated photon propagation; accurate organ source; attenuation; axillary lymph nodes; energy-dependent detector resolution; large-angle collimator penetration; mathematical segmentation; maximum rectangular region algorithm; modified spatial sampling; nonstationary distance-dependent detector resolution; numerical torso phantom; photon scatter; realistic Monte Carlo simulation; Attenuation; Electromagnetic scattering; Image segmentation; Imaging phantoms; Monte Carlo methods; Noise generators; Optimization methods; Particle scattering; Single photon emission computed tomography; X-ray scattering;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on