DocumentCode :
1830293
Title :
Evaluation of a SPECT attenuation correction method using CT data registered with automatic registration software
Author :
Motomura, Nobutoku ; Takahashi, Masaaki ; Nakagawara, George ; Iida, Hidehiro
Author_Institution :
Nucl. Medicine Syst. Dept., Toshiba Med. Syst. Corp., Otawara, Japan
Volume :
4
fYear :
2003
fDate :
19-25 Oct. 2003
Firstpage :
2676
Abstract :
In recent years, various SPECT attenuation correction systems using CT data have been developed. For attenuation correction of cerebral SPECT data in routine studies, the software method using CT and SPECT data registered with automatic registration software has been used much more than the hardware method using CT data acquired with combined SPECT/CT systems. In this work, the software-based method was compared with a method using TCT data acquired with a sequential SPECT/TCT scan with no subject motion as the golden standard. Attenuation corrected SPECT values using the registered CT data were compared to those using TCT data. Ten sets of normal volunteer data were acquired. The differences in attenuation corrected SPECT values between the SPECT-CT and SPECT-TCT methods were 1.4±1.9% for the entire brain, and the maximum regional difference was 7.8% for both white and gray matter regions. Other regions within the brain where SPECT values were low (e.g., skull, ventricles) were excluded from evaluation. The results indicate that automatic registration software can register CT to SPECT data quite accurately and that a software-based attenuation correction method using CT data can correct attenuation accurately for cerebral data. Consequently, such a software-based attenuation correction method using CT data that requires no specialized hardware seems feasible for use in routine studies.
Keywords :
brain; medical computing; medical image processing; single photon emission computed tomography; SPECT attenuation correction method; automatic registration software; brain; cerebral data; combined SPECT/CT system; gray matter region; hardware method; maximum regional difference; normal volunteer data; registered CT data; sequential SPECT/TCT scan; skull; ventricles; white matter region; Attenuation; Collimators; Computed tomography; Detectors; Hardware; Magnetic resonance imaging; Pixel; Positron emission tomography; Skull; Software standards;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2003 IEEE
ISSN :
1082-3654
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8257-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2003.1352439
Filename :
1352439
Link To Document :
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