4.3 Article

Sub-millimeter nuclear medical imaging with high sensitivity in positron emission tomography using β+γ coincidences

Journal

JOURNAL OF INSTRUMENTATION
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/9/01/P01008

Keywords

Gamma camera, SPECT, PET PET/CT, coronary CT angiography (CTA); Compton imaging; Instrumentation for hadron therapy; Medical-image reconstruction methods and algorithms, computer-aided software

Funding

  1. DFG Cluster of Excellence MAP (Munich-Centre for Advanced photonics)

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We present a nuclear medical imaging technique, employing triple-g trajectory intersections from beta(+)-gamma coincidences, able to reach sub-millimeter spatial resolution in 3 dimensions with a reduced requirement of reconstructed intersections per voxel compared to a conventional PET reconstruction analysis. This 'gamma-PET' technique draws on specific beta(+)-decaying isotopes, simultaneously emitting an additional photon. Exploiting the triple coincidence between the positron annihilation and the third photon, it is possible to separate the reconstructed 'true' events from background. In order to characterize this technique, Monte-Carlo simulations and image reconstructions have been performed. The achievable spatial resolution has been found to reach ca. 0.4 mm (FWHM) in each direction for the visualization of a Na-22 point source. Only 40 intersections are sufficient for a reliable sub-millimeter image reconstruction of a point source embedded in a scattering volume of water inside a voxel volume of about 1 mm(3) ('high-resolution mode'). Moreover, starting with an injected activity of 400 MBq for Br-76, the same number of only about 40 reconstructed intersections are needed in case of a larger voxel volume of 2 x 2 x 3 mm(3) ('high-sensitivity mode'). Requiring such a low number of reconstructed events significantly reduces the required acquisition time for image reconstruction (in the above case to about 140 s) and thus may open up the perspective for a quasi real-time imaging.

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