Wong W H, Li H, Uribe J, Baghaei H, Wang Y, Yokoyama S
Department of Nuclear Medicine, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
J Nucl Med. 2001 Apr;42(4):624-32.
Higher count-rate gamma cameras than are currently used are needed if the technology is to fulfill its promise in positron coincidence imaging, radionuclide therapy dosimetry imaging, and cardiac first-pass imaging. The present single-crystal design coupled with conventional detector electronics and the traditional Anger-positioning algorithm hinder higher count-rate imaging because of the pileup of gamma-ray signals in the detector and electronics. At an interaction rate of 2 million events per second, the fraction of nonpileup events is < 20% of the total incident events. Hence, the recovery of pileup events can significantly increase the count-rate capability, increase the yield of imaging photons, and minimize image artifacts associated with pileups. A new technology to significantly enhance the performance of gamma cameras in this area is introduced.
We introduce a new electronic design called high-yield-pileup-event-recovery (HYPER) electronics for processing the detector signal in gamma cameras so that the individual gamma energies and positions of pileup events, including multiple pileups, can be resolved and recovered despite the mixing of signals. To illustrate the feasibility of the design concept, we have developed a small gamma-camera prototype with the HYPER-Anger electronics. The camera has a 10 x 10 x 1 cm NaI(Tl) crystal with four photomultipliers. Hot-spot and line sources with very high 99mTc activities were imaged. The phantoms were imaged continuously from 60,000 to 3,500,000 counts per second to illustrate the efficacy of the method as a function of counting rates.
At 2-3 million events per second, all phantoms were imaged with little distortion, pileup, and dead-time loss. At these counting rates, multiple pileup events (> or = 3 events piling together) were the predominate occurrences, and the HYPER circuit functioned well to resolve and recover these events. The full width at half maximum of the line-spread function at 3,000,000 counts per second was 1.6 times that at 60,000 counts per second.
This feasibility study showed that the HYPER electronic concept works; it can significantly increase the count-rate capability and dose efficiency of gamma cameras. In a larger clinical camera, multiple HYPER-Anger circuits may be implemented to further improve the imaging counting rates that we have shown by multiple times. This technology would facilitate the use of gamma cameras for radionuclide therapy dosimetry imaging, cardiac first-pass imaging, and positron coincidence imaging and the simultaneous acquisition of transmission and emission data using different isotopes with less cross-contamination between transmission and emission data.
如果要使该技术在正电子符合成像、放射性核素治疗剂量成像和心脏首次通过成像中实现其前景,就需要比目前使用的更高计数率的伽马相机。当前的单晶设计与传统探测器电子学和传统的安杰尔定位算法相结合,由于探测器和电子学中伽马射线信号的堆积,阻碍了更高计数率的成像。在每秒200万个事件的相互作用率下,非堆积事件的比例不到总入射事件的20%。因此,堆积事件的恢复可以显著提高计数率能力,增加成像光子的产量,并最小化与堆积相关的图像伪影。本文介绍了一种能显著提高伽马相机在这一领域性能的新技术。
我们引入了一种名为高产堆积事件恢复(HYPER)电子学的新电子设计,用于处理伽马相机中的探测器信号,以便尽管信号混合,堆积事件(包括多次堆积)的单个伽马能量和位置仍可被分辨和恢复。为了说明设计概念的可行性,我们开发了一款带有HYPER - 安杰尔电子学的小型伽马相机原型。该相机有一个10×10×1厘米的碘化钠(铊)晶体和四个光电倍增管。对具有非常高的锝 - 99m活度的热点和线源进行了成像。对体模从每秒60000次计数到3500000次计数进行连续成像,以说明该方法作为计数率函数的有效性。
在每秒200万至300万个事件时,所有体模成像时失真、堆积和死时间损失都很小。在这些计数率下,多次堆积事件(≥3个事件堆积在一起)占主导,并且HYPER电路能很好地分辨和恢复这些事件。在每秒300万个计数时,线扩展函数的半高全宽是每秒60000次计数时的1.6倍。
这项可行性研究表明HYPER电子概念是可行的;它可以显著提高伽马相机的计数率能力和剂量效率。在更大的临床相机中,可以实施多个HYPER - 安杰尔电路,以进一步提高我们所展示的成像计数率数倍。这项技术将便于伽马相机用于放射性核素治疗剂量成像、心脏首次通过成像和正电子符合成像,以及使用不同同位素同时采集透射和发射数据,且透射和发射数据之间的交叉污染更少。