DocumentCode
438587
Title
Quantitative attenuation correction for PET/CT using iterative reconstruction of low-dose dual-energy CT
Author
Kinahan, Paul E. ; Fessler, Jeffrey A. ; Alessio, Adam M. ; Lewellen, Thomas K.
Author_Institution
Med. Center, Washington Univ., Seattle, WA, USA
Volume
5
fYear
2004
fDate
16-22 Oct. 2004
Firstpage
3285
Abstract
We present the results of using iterative reconstruction of dual-energy CT (DECT) to perform accurate CT-based attenuation correction (CTAC) for PET emission images. Current methods, such as bilinear scaling, introduce quantitative errors in the PET emission image for bone, metallic implants, and contrast agents. DECT has had limited use in the past for quantitative CT imaging due to increased patient dose and high noise levels in the decoupled CT basis-material images. Reconstruction methods that model the acquisition physics impose a significant computational burden due to the large image matrix size (typically 512 × 512). For CTAC, however, three factors make DECT feasible: (1) a smaller matrix is needed for the transmission image, which reduces the noise per pixel, (2) a smaller matrix significantly accelerates an iterative CT reconstruction algorithm, (3) the monoenergetic transmission image at 511 keV is the sum of the two decoupled basis-material images. Initial results using a 128 × 128 matrix size for a test object comprised of air, soft tissue, dense bone, and a mixture of tissue and bone demonstrate a significant reduction of bias using DECT (from 20% to ∼0% for the tissue/bone mixture). FBP reconstructed images, however, have significant noise. Noise levels are reduced from ∼8% to ∼3% by the use of PWLS reconstruction.
Keywords
bone; computerised tomography; dosimetry; image reconstruction; iterative methods; medical image processing; noise; positron emission tomography; PET emission images; PET/CT system; acquisition physics; air; bilinear scaling; contrast agents; decoupled CT basis-material images; dense bone; filtered back projection; image matrix size; iterative reconstruction; low-dose dual-energy CT; metallic implants; monoenergetic transmission image; noise levels; quantitative attenuation correction; soft tissue; Attenuation; Bones; Computed tomography; Image reconstruction; Implants; Noise level; Noise reduction; Physics computing; Positron emission tomography; Reconstruction algorithms;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2004 IEEE
ISSN
1082-3654
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8700-7
Electronic_ISBN
1082-3654
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NSSMIC.2004.1466391
Filename
1466391
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