학술논문

Initial results from a PET/planar small animal imaging system
Document Type
Conference
Source
1998 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record. 1998 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference (Cat. No.98CH36255) Nuclear science and medical imaging Nuclear Science Symposium, 1998. Conference Record. 1998 IEEE. 2:1274-1276 vol.2 1998
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Positron emission tomography
Animals
Mice
Scintillation counters
Position sensitive particle detectors
Solid scintillation detectors
Sensor arrays
Crystals
Bismuth
Photomultipliers
Language
ISSN
1082-3654
Abstract
A pair of stationary, opposed scintillation detectors in time coincidence is being used to create planar projection or tomographic images of small animals injected with positron-emitting radiotracers. The detectors are comprised of arrays of individual crystals of bismuth germanate coupled to position-sensitive photomultiplier tubes. In projection mode, the animal is placed within the 55 mm/spl times/45 mm useful field-of-view of the detectors and images are formed from coincidence lines that fall close to the normals of both detectors. In tomographic mode, the animal is placed on a rotation stage between the detectors and rotated around a vertical axis to acquire all possible lines-of-response. Tomographic images are then reconstructed from lines-of-response falling within a user-specified angle of each detector normal. In mice, the system is capable of high-speed, whole-body dynamic projection imaging, and whole body tomographic imaging of semi-static tracer distributions. An ECG gating capability is also available for evaluating cardiac function. This system is currently being used to study tracer transport in normal and genetically altered mice.