AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to assess the effectiveness of a new scatter-correction method (MCS-SSS) versus a conventional method (TFS-SSS) in PET/CT brain imaging, especially when using O-gas inhalation.
  • Phantom experiments showed that TFS-SSS created significant cold artifacts, leading to substantial underestimation of image activity concentrations, while MCS-SSS kept errors below 5%.
  • In patient studies, TFS-SSS images displayed cold artifacts, but MCS-SSS successfully eliminated these artifacts, improving the overall accuracy of quantitative images of cerebral blood flow and oxygen metabolism.

Article Abstract

In 3-dimensional PET/CT imaging of the brain with O-gas inhalation, high radioactivity in the face mask creates cold artifacts and affects the quantitative accuracy when scatter is corrected by conventional methods (e.g., single-scatter simulation [SSS] with tail-fitting scaling [TFS-SSS]). Here we examined the validity of a newly developed scatter-correction method that combines SSS with a scaling factor calculated by Monte Carlo simulation (MCS-SSS). We performed phantom experiments and patient studies. In the phantom experiments, a plastic bottle simulating a face mask was attached to a cylindric phantom simulating the brain. The cylindric phantom was filled with F-FDG solution (3.8-7.0 kBq/mL). The bottle was filled with nonradioactive air or various levels of F-FDG (0-170 kBq/mL). Images were corrected either by TFS-SSS or MCS-SSS using the CT data of the bottle filled with nonradioactive air. We compared the image activity concentration in the cylindric phantom with the true activity concentration. We also performed O-gas brain PET based on the steady-state method on patients with cerebrovascular disease to obtain quantitative images of cerebral blood flow and oxygen metabolism. In the phantom experiments, a cold artifact was observed immediately next to the bottle on TFS-SSS images, where the image activity concentrations in the cylindric phantom were underestimated by 18%, 36%, and 70% at the bottle radioactivity levels of 2.4, 5.1, and 9.7 kBq/mL, respectively. At higher bottle radioactivity, the image activity concentrations in the cylindric phantom were greater than 98% underestimated. For the MCS-SSS, in contrast, the error was within 5% at each bottle radioactivity level, although the image generated slight high-activity artifacts around the bottle when the bottle contained significantly high radioactivity. In the patient imaging with O and CO inhalation, cold artifacts were observed on TFS-SSS images, whereas no artifacts were observed on any of the MCS-SSS images. MCS-SSS accurately corrected the scatters in O-gas brain PET when the 3-dimensional acquisition mode was used, preventing the generation of cold artifacts, which were observed immediately next to a face mask on TFS-SSS images. The MCS-SSS method will contribute to accurate quantitative assessments.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.117.193060DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cylindric phantom
20
face mask
12
cold artifacts
12
phantom experiments
12
image activity
12
tfs-sss images
12
bottle radioactivity
12
artifacts observed
12
bottle
9
single-scatter simulation
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!