Title :
Quantitative SPECT brain imaging: effects of attenuation and detector responseat
Author :
Gilland, D.R. ; Jaszczak, R.J. ; Liang, Zixuan ; Greer, K.L. ; Coleman, R.E.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Duke Univ. Med. Center, Durham, NC, USA
Abstract :
Two factors which degrade quantitative accuracy in single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging of the brain are attenuation and detector response. Two reconstruction methods that compensate for attenuation and detector response (a filtered backprojection method with Metz filter and Chang attenuation compensation and a 3-D maximum-likelihood-EM method) are compared in terms of quantitative accuracy. The methods were tested on simulated data on the 3-D Hoffman brain phantom. The simulation incorporated attenuation and distance-dependent detector response. The root-mean-square (RMS) error was measured in the reconstructed images in the gray matter, white matter, and ventricle regions. The results in the white matter showed that the 3-D maximum-likelihood-expectation-maximization (ML-EM) method over a range of iteration stopping points had a smaller error than the filtered backprojection method over a similar range of power factors. In the gray matter the reverse was found, and this was attributed to an edge artifact in the 3-D ML-EM images. Reconstruction times for the 3-D ML-EM method were greatly reduced through efficient coding, limited source support, and computing attenuation factors only along rays perpendicular to the detector.<>
Keywords :
brain; computerised tomography; radioisotope scanning and imaging; 3D Hoffman brain phantom; 3D maximum-likelihood-EM method; Chang attenuation compensation; Metz filter; detector response; efficient coding; filtered backprojection method; gray matter; iteration stopping points; nuclear medicine; perpendicular rays; quantitative accuracy degradation; reconstruction methods; reconstruction time; root-mean-square error; single photon emission computed tomography; ventricle regions; white matter; Attenuation; Brain modeling; Computational modeling; Degradation; Detectors; Filters; Image reconstruction; Reconstruction algorithms; Single photon emission computed tomography; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference, 1991., Conference Record of the 1991 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Santa Fe, NM, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-0513-2
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.1991.259210