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Optimization of a Model Corrected Blood Input Function from Dynamic FDG-PET Images of Small Animal Heart . | LitMetric

Optimization of a Model Corrected Blood Input Function from Dynamic FDG-PET Images of Small Animal Heart .

IEEE Trans Nucl Sci

Department of Radiology and Medical Imaging, University of Virginia, VA 22908 USA (telephone: 434-924-0284, ).

Published: October 2013

Quantitative evaluation of dynamic Positron Emission Tomography (PET) of mouse heart in vivo is challenging due to the small size of the heart and limited intrinsic spatial resolution of the PET scanner. Here, we optimized a compartment model which can simultaneously correct for spill over and partial volume effects for both blood pool and the myocardium, compute kinetic rate parameters and generate model corrected blood input function (MCBIF) from ordered subset expectation maximization - maximum a posteriori (OSEM-MAP) cardiac and respiratory gated F-FDG PET images of mouse heart with attenuation correction in vivo, without any invasive blood sampling. Arterial blood samples were collected from a single mouse to indicate the feasibility of the proposed method. In order to establish statistical significance, venous blood samples from n=6 mice were obtained at 2 late time points, when SP contamination from the tissue to the blood is maximum. We observed that correct bounds and initial guesses for the PV and SP coefficients accurately model the wash-in and wash-out dynamics of the tracer from mouse blood. The residual plot indicated an average difference of about 1.7% between the blood samples and MCBIF. The downstream rate of myocardial FDG influx constant, Ki (0.15±0.03 min), compared well with Ki obtained from arterial blood samples (P=0.716). In conclusion, the proposed methodology is not only quantitative but also reproducible.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3985393PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNS.2013.2269032DOI Listing

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