DocumentCode :
2613438
Title :
Multi-slice SPECT attenuation and scatter correction using Monte Carlo simulated system matrices
Author :
Sauve, Anne C. ; Reutter, Bryan W. ; Boutchko, Rostyslav ; Choong, Woon-Seng ; Huesman, Ronald H. ; Gullberg, Grant T.
Author_Institution :
E.O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron Rd, MS55R0121, CA, 94720, USA
fYear :
2008
fDate :
19-25 Oct. 2008
Firstpage :
4273
Lastpage :
4276
Abstract :
Specifying the system matrix is one of the most important processes in computed tomography. For SPECT, the imaging physics can be very difficult to model and approximations are made which result in mismatch between the model and the data. In a move toward better modeling the physics, we developed a Monte Carlo method for specifying the system matrix for small animal imaging (but is also applicable for human imaging). A study was performed using the computer-generated MOBY rat phantom. This phantom returns a high resolution (0.90 mm) transmission map, which was used in Monte Carlo simulations to estimate attenuation and scatter. System matrices were estimated for the reconstruction of 6 heart slices from projections of 6 detector rows. SimSET was used to model 3 system matrices for each of the following: no attenuation and no scatter, attenuation only, and attenuation and scatter. For each slice, the system matrices had 4096=64x64 columns each representing a sinogram from a different source voxel in the slice. SimSET simulated 106 counts for each source voxel. Each simulated 140 keV photon was forced to be detected on one of the 180 parallel projections evenly spaced over 360°. The system matrices also modeled spillover to account for the scatter from outside the 6 heart slices. For the reconstruction, projections were simulated using SimSET (1012 total counts) to estimate the projection of the 6 slices including scatter from outside the 6 slices. These projections were reconstructed using the estimated system matrices and using 50 iterations of the ML-EM algorithm. There was a 20% increase of average intensity over the heart region with attenuation correction compared to without attenuation correction and a 3.5% decrease from the attenuation corrected result after scatter + attenuation correction. Attenuation correction reconstruction alone, overestimated the original by 3.3%. The results suggest that for quantitative small animal imagi- - ng it is important to correct for both attenuation and scatter when using radiolabeled tracers that emit 140 keV photons. This is even more true for radiolabeled tracers that emit 27.5 keV photons as both attenuation and scatter are more important at that lower energy.
Keywords :
Animals; Attenuation; Electromagnetic scattering; Heart; High-resolution imaging; Image reconstruction; Imaging phantoms; Monte Carlo methods; Particle scattering; Physics;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2008. NSS '08. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Dresden, Germany
ISSN :
1095-7863
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2714-7
Electronic_ISBN :
1095-7863
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2008.4774226
Filename :
4774226
Link To Document :
بازگشت