el Fakhri G N, Buvat I, Pélégrini M, Benali H, Almeida P, Bendriem B, Todd-Pokropek A, Di Paola R
U494 INSERM, CHU Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France.
Eur J Nucl Med. 1999 May;26(5):437-46. doi: 10.1007/s002590050409.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relative influence of scatter, attenuation, depth-dependent collimator response and finite spatial resolution upon the image characteristics in cardiac single-photon emission tomography (SPET). An acquisition of an anthropomorphic cardiac phantom was performed together with corresponding SPET Monte Carlo simulations. The cardiac phantom and the Monte Carlo simulations were designed so that the effect of scatter, attenuation, depth-dependent collimator response and finite spatial resolution could be studied individually and in combination. The impact of each physical effect and of combinations of effects was studied in terms of absolute and relative quantitative accuracy, spatial resolution and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in the resulting images. No corrections for these effects were assessed. Results obtained from Monte Carlo simulations and real acquisitions were in excellent agreement. Attenuation introduced about 90% activity underestimation in a 10-mm-thick left ventricle wall while finite spatial resolution alone introduced about 30% activity underestimation. Scatter had a negligible impact on quantitative accuracy in the recontructed slices when attenuation was present. Neither bull's eye map homogeneity nor contrast between a hot and a cold region were affected by depth-dependent collimator response or finite spatial resolution. Bull's eye map homogeneity was severely affected by attenuation but not by scatter. Attenuation and scatter reduced contrast by about 20% each. Both attenuation and scatter increased the full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) characterizing the spatial resolution of the imaging system by approximately 1 mm each but the main effect responsible for the observed 11-mm FWHM spatial resolution was the depth-dependent collimator response. SNR was reduced by a factor of approximately 2.5 because of attenuation, while scattered counts increased SNR by approximately 10%. In conclusion, the quantification of the relative influence of the different physical effects showed that attenuation is definitely the major phenomenon affecting cardiac SPET imaging accuracy, but that finite spatial resolution, scatter and depth-dependent collimator response also contribute significantly to the errors in absolute and relative quantitation and to the poor spatial resolution.
本研究的目的是调查散射、衰减、深度依赖型准直器响应和有限空间分辨率对心脏单光子发射断层扫描(SPET)图像特征的相对影响。对一个仿真人体心脏模型进行了采集,并同时进行了相应的SPET蒙特卡罗模拟。设计心脏模型和蒙特卡罗模拟,以便能够分别和综合研究散射、衰减、深度依赖型准直器响应和有限空间分辨率的影响。从绝对和相对定量准确性、空间分辨率以及所得图像的信噪比(SNR)方面研究了每种物理效应及其组合效应的影响。未评估对这些效应的校正。蒙特卡罗模拟和实际采集获得的结果高度一致。在厚度为10毫米的左心室壁中,衰减导致约90%的活性被低估,而仅有限空间分辨率就导致约30%的活性被低估。当存在衰减时,散射对重建切片的定量准确性影响可忽略不计。深度依赖型准直器响应或有限空间分辨率均未影响靶心图均匀性或热区与冷区之间的对比度。靶心图均匀性受到衰减的严重影响,但不受散射影响。衰减和散射分别使对比度降低约20%。衰减和散射均使表征成像系统空间分辨率的半高全宽(FWHM)各自增加约1毫米,但导致观察到的11毫米FWHM空间分辨率的主要效应是深度依赖型准直器响应。由于衰减,SNR降低了约2.5倍,而散射计数使SNR增加了约10%。总之,对不同物理效应相对影响的量化表明,衰减绝对是影响心脏SPET成像准确性的主要现象,但有限空间分辨率、散射和深度依赖型准直器响应也对绝对和相对定量误差以及较差的空间分辨率有显著贡献。