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Journal ArticleDOI

Monte Carlo and experimental evaluation of accuracy and noise properties of two scatter correction methods for SPECT

TLDR
Correct quantitation can be obtained with TDCS(Gauss), with a relatively small reduction in S/N ratio, according to Monte Carlo simulations.
Abstract
Scatter correction is a prerequisite for quantitative SPECT, but potentially increases noise. Monte Carlo simulations (EGS4) and physical phantom measurements were used to compare accuracy and noise properties of two scatter correction techniques: the triple-energy window (TEW), and the transmission dependent convolution subtraction (TDCS) techniques. Two scatter functions were investigated for TDCS: (i) the originally proposed mono-exponential function and (ii) an exponential plus Gaussian scatter function demonstrated to be superior from our Monte Carlo simulations. Signal to noise ratio (S/N) and accuracy were investigated in cylindrical phantoms and a chest phantom. Results from each method were compared to the true primary counts (simulations), or known activity concentrations (phantom studies). was used in all cases. The optimized method overall performed best, with an accuracy of better than 4% for all simulations and physical phantom studies. Maximum errors for TEW and of -30 and -22%, respectively, were observed in the heart chamber of the simulated chest phantom. TEW had the worst S/N ratio of the three techniques. The S/N ratios of the two TDCS methods were similar and only slightly lower than those of simulated true primary data. Thus, accurate quantitation can be obtained with , with a relatively small reduction in S/N ratio.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative Analysis in Nuclear Medicine Imaging

TL;DR: This paper presents Quantitative Imaging-Based Dosimetry and Treatment Planning in Radionuclide Therapy, which combines quantitative analysis in Functional Brain Imaging and Quantitative Analysis in Nuclear Oncologic Imaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Evidence-Based Review of Quantitative SPECT Imaging and Potential Clinical Applications

TL;DR: SPECT continues to suffer from poorer photon detection efficiency and spatial resolution than PET; however, it has the benefit in some situations of longer radionuclide half-lives, which may better suit the biologic process under examination, as well as the ability to perform multitracer studies using pulse height spectroscopy to separate different radiolabels.
Journal ArticleDOI

MIRD Pamphlet No. 23: Quantitative SPECT for Patient-Specific 3-Dimensional Dosimetry in Internal Radionuclide Therapy

TL;DR: An overview of 3-dimensional SPECT methods and requirements for internal dosimetry at both regional and voxel levels is presented, and Combined SPECT/CT image-based methods are emphasized, because the CT-derived anatomic information allows one to address multiple technical factors that affect SPECT quantification while facilitating the patient-specific voxels-level dosimetric calculation itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relevance of accurate Monte Carlo modeling in nuclear medical imaging.

TL;DR: A derivation and methodological basis for Monte Carlo modeling techniques for nuclear medical imaging innovations and examples of some useful features of such sophisticated tools in connection with common computing facilities and more powerful multiple-processor parallel processing systems are provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative Accuracy of Clinical 99mTc SPECT/CT Using Ordered-Subset Expectation Maximization with 3-Dimensional Resolution Recovery, Attenuation, and Scatter Correction

TL;DR: Current commercially available SPECT/CT technology using OSEM-3D reconstruction, scatter correction, and CT-based attenuation correction allows quantification of 99mTc radioactivity concentration in absolute terms within 3.6% in phantoms and 1.1% in patients with a focus on the bladder.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Accelerated image reconstruction using ordered subsets of projection data

TL;DR: Ordered subsets EM (OS-EM) provides a restoration imposing a natural positivity condition and with close links to the EM algorithm, applicable in both single photon (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET).
Journal ArticleDOI

A practical method for position-dependent Compton-scatter correction in single photon emission CT

TL;DR: For three different activity distributions in cylinder phantoms, simulation tests gave good agreement between the activity distributions reconstructed from unscattered photons and those from the corrected data.
Journal Article

Compton-scatter compensation using the triple energy window method for single and dual isotope SPECT

TL;DR: A triple-energy window (TEW) scatter compensation method for determining position-dependent Compton scatter is proposed and a physical evaluation of this method was conducted using phantoms and also applied to patients in a clinical trial.
Journal Article

Correction of nonuniform attenuation in cardiac SPECT imaging.

TL;DR: Results from a heart-lung phantom study and a 201Tl patient study demonstrated that the iterative EM algorithm with attenuation correction provided improved image quality in terms of reduced streak artifacts and noise, and more accurate quantitative information in Terms of improved radioactivity distribution uniformity where uniformity existed, and better anatomic object definition.
Journal Article

Improved SPECT using simultaneous emission and transmission tomography.

TL;DR: A method to simultaneously record single photon emission and transmission tomographic studies to produce a map of attenuation coefficients (mu) for the body and preliminary attenuation correction experiments have demonstrated an accuracy of better than 5% for estimated activity.
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