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Journal ArticleDOI

The design and implementation of a motion correction scheme for neurological PET.

TLDR
A method has been developed to accurately monitor the motion of the head during a neurological PET acquisition, and correct for this motion prior to image reconstruction and does not add significantly to either the acquisition or the subsequent data processing.
Abstract
A method is described to monitor the motion of the head during neurological positron emission tomography (PET) acquisitions and to correct the data post acquisition for the recorded motion prior to image reconstruction. The technique uses an optical tracking system, Polaris™, to accurately monitor the position of the head during the PET acquisition. The PET data are acquired in list mode where the events are written directly to disk during acquisition. The motion tracking information is aligned to the PET data using a sequence of pseudo-random numbers, which are inserted into the time tags in the list mode event stream through the gating input interface on the tomograph. The position of the head is monitored during the transmission acquisition, and it is assumed that there is minimal head motion during this measurement. Each event, prompt and delayed, in the list mode event stream is corrected for motion and transformed into the transmission space. For a given line of response, normalization, including corrections for detector efficiency, geometry and crystal interference and dead time are applied prior to motion correction and rebinning in the sinogram. A series of phantom experiments were performed to confirm the accuracy of the method: (a) a point source located in three discrete axial positions in the tomograph field of view, 0 mm, 10 mm and 20 mm from a reference point, (b) a multi-line source phantom rotated in both discrete and gradual rotations through ±5° and ±15°, including a vertical and horizontal movement in the plane. For both phantom experiments images were reconstructed for both the fixed and motion corrected data. Measurements for resolution, full width at half maximum (FWHM) and full width at tenth maximum (FWTM), were calculated from these images and a comparison made between the fixed and motion corrected datasets. From the point source measurements, the FWHM at each axial position was 7.1 mm in the horizontal direction, and increasing from 4.7 mm at the 0 mm position, to 4.8 mm, 20 mm offset, in the vertical direction. The results from the multi-line source phantom with ±5° rotations showed a maximum degradation in FWHM, when compared with the stationary phantom, of 0.6 mm, in the horizontal direction, and 0.3 mm in the vertical direction. The corresponding values for the larger rotation, ±15°, were 0.7 mm and 1.1 mm, respectively. The performance of the method was confirmed with a Hoffman brain phantom moved continuously, and a clinical acquisition using [11C]raclopride (normal volunteer). A visual comparison of both the motion and non-motion corrected images of the Hoffman brain phantom clearly demonstrated the efficacy of the method. A sample time-activity curve extracted from the clinical study showed irregularities prior to motion correction, which were removed after correction. A method has been developed to accurately monitor the motion of the head during a neurological PET acquisition, and correct for this motion prior to image reconstruction. The method has been demonstrated to be accurate and does not add significantly to either the acquisition or the subsequent data processing.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Direct reconstruction of kinetic parameter images from dynamic PET data

TL;DR: Experimental simulations of a rat head imaged in a working small animal scanner indicate that direct parametric reconstruction can substantially reduce root-mean-squared error (RMSE) in the estimation of kinetic parameters, as compared to indirect methods, without appreciably increasing computation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of expectation on placebo-induced dopamine release in Parkinson disease.

TL;DR: The strength of belief of improvement can directly modulate dopamine release in patients with PD and the importance of uncertainty and/or salience over and above a patient's prior treatment response in regulating the placebo effect is demonstrated.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Design of a motion-compensation OSEM list-mode algorithm for resolution-recovery reconstruction for the HRRT

TL;DR: MOLAR, a motion-compensation OSEM list-mode algorithm for resolution-recovery reconstruction on a computer cluster with the following features is designed: direct use of list mode data with dynamic motion information (Polaris), and exact reprojection of each line-of- response (LOR).
Journal ArticleDOI

PET/MRI for Neurologic Applications

TL;DR: Methods for improving the performance and information content of each modality by using the information provided by the other technique and how improved PET quantification can be used to validate several MRI techniques are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

MRI-Assisted PET Motion Correction for Neurologic Studies in an Integrated MR-PET Scanner

TL;DR: An MRI-based MC method has the potential to improve PET image quality, increasing its reliability, reproducibility, and quantitative accuracy, and to benefit many neurologic applications.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative Analysis of D2 Dopamine Receptor Binding in the Living Human Brain by PET

TL;DR: Studies of [11C]raclopride binding indicate that clinically effective doses of chemically distinct neuroleptic drugs result in 85 to 90 percent occupancy of D2 dopamine receptors in the putamen of schizophrenic patients.
Book ChapterDOI

A Single Scatter Simulation Technique for Scatter Correction in 3D PET

TL;DR: A single scatter simulation technique for scatter correction is developed which is closely integrated with standard 3D filtered backprojection reconstruction and results from phantom studies are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

3-D phantom to simulate cerebral blood flow and metabolic images for PET

TL;DR: A three-dimensional brain phantom has been developed to simulate the activity distributions found in the human brain in the cerebral blood flow and metabolism studies employed in PET (positron emission tomography).
Journal ArticleDOI

Head fixation device for reproducible position alignment in transmission CT and positron emission tomography.

TL;DR: A head-positioning device allowing accurate position transference between computed tomography and positron emission tomography is described, and the coordinates of an anatomic structure may be determined and transferred between the two images.
Journal ArticleDOI

PET analysis of human dopamine receptor subtypes using 11C-SCH 23390 and 11C-raclopride.

TL;DR: Clinical antipsychotic drug treatment with sulpiride and cis(Z)-flupentixol decanoate causes a substantial blockade of D2-dopamine receptors in the basal ganglia but has only a minor effect on D1-dipamine receptors.
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