• DocumentCode
    1842599
  • Title

    Acquisition and automated 3-D segmentation of respiratory/cardiac-gated PET transmission images

  • Author

    Reutter, B.W. ; Klein, G.J. ; Brennan, K.M. ; Huesman, R.H.

  • Author_Institution
    Lawrence Berkeley Nat. Lab., California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
  • Volume
    2
  • fYear
    1996
  • fDate
    2-9 Nov 1996
  • Firstpage
    1357
  • Abstract
    To evaluate the impact of respiratory motion on attenuation correction of cardiac PET data, we acquired and automatically segmented gated transmission data for a dog breathing on its own under gas anesthesia. Data were acquired for 20 min on a CTI/Siemens ECAT EXACT HR (47-slice) scanner configured for 12 gates in a static study. Two respiratory gates were obtained using data from a pneumatic bellows placed around the dog´s chest, in conjunction with 6 cardiac gates from standard EKG gating. Both signals were directed to a LabVIEW-controlled Macintosh, which translated them into one of 12 gate addresses. The respiratory gating threshold was placed near end-expiration to acquire 6 cardiac-gated datasets at end-expiration and 6 cardiac-gated datasets during breaths. Breaths occurred about once every 10 sec and lasted about 1-1.5 sec. For each respiratory gate, data were summed over cardiac gates and torso and lung surfaces were segmented automatically using a differential 3-D edge detection algorithm. Three-dimensional visualizations showed that lung surfaces adjacent to the heart translated 9 mm inferiorly during breaths. Our results suggest that respiration-compensated attenuation correction is feasible with a modest amount of gated transmission data and is necessary for accurate quantitation of high-resolution gated cardiac PET data
  • Keywords
    positron emission tomography; 1 to 1.5 s; 20 min; 3D visualizations; EKG gating; LabVIEW-controlled Macintosh; attenuation correction; automated 3D segmentation; breathing; cardiac PET data; differential 3D edge detection algorithm; dog; end-expiration; gas anesthesia; lung surfaces; pneumatic bellows; respiratory gates; respiratory motion; respiratory/cardiac-gated PET transmission images; torso; Attenuation; Data acquisition; Heart rate; Image edge detection; Image segmentation; Lungs; Myocardium; Positron emission tomography; Spatial resolution; Torso;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Nuclear Science Symposium, 1996. Conference Record., 1996 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Anaheim, CA
  • ISSN
    1082-3654
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-3534-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/NSSMIC.1996.591700
  • Filename
    591700