학술논문

High resolution emission and transmission imaging using the same detector
Document Type
Conference
Source
IEEE Nuclear Science Symposuim & Medical Imaging Conference Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record (NSS/MIC), 2010 IEEE. :3372-3375 Oct, 2010
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Bioengineering
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Collimators
Pixel
Phantoms
Energy resolution
Spatial resolution
Language
ISSN
1082-3654
Abstract
We demonstrate the capability of one detector, the Micro-Angiographic Fluoroscope (MAF) detector, to image for two types of applications: nuclear medicine imaging and radiography. The MAF has 1024 × 1024 pixels with an effective pixel size of 35 microns and is capable of real-time imaging at 30 fps. It has a CCD camera coupled by a fiber-optic taper to a light image intensifier (LII) viewing a 300-micron thick CsI phosphor. The large variable gain of the LII provides quantum-limited operation with little additive instrumentation noise and enables operation in both energy-integrating (El) and sensitive low-exposure single photon counting (SPC) modes. We used the El mode to take a radiograph, and the SPC mode to image a custom phantom filled with 1 mCi of 1–125. The phantom is made of hot rods with diameters ranging from 0.9 mm to 2.3 mm. A 1 mm diameter parallel hole, medium energy gamma camera collimator was placed between the phantom and the MAF and was moved multiple times at equal intervals in random directions to eliminate the grid pattern corresponding to the collimator septa. Data was acquired at 20 fps. Two algorithms to localize the events were used: 1) simple threshold and 2) a weighted centroid method. Although all the hot rods could be clearly identified, the image generated with the simple threshold method shows more blurring than that with the weighted centroid method. With the diffuse cluster of pixels from each single detection event localized to a single pixel, the weighted centroid method shows improved spatial resolution. A radiograph of the phantom was taken with the same MAF in El mode without the collimator. It shows clear structural details of the rods. Compared to the radiograph, the sharpness of the emission image is limited by the collimator resolution and could be improved by optimized collimator design. This study demonstrated that the same MAF detector can be used in both radioisotope and x-ray imaging, combining the benefits of each.