Rousset O G, Ma Y, Evans A C
McConnell Brain Imaging Center, Montréal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Québec, Canada.
J Nucl Med. 1998 May;39(5):904-11.
The accuracy of PET for measuring regional radiotracer concentrations in the human brain is limited by the finite resolution capability of the scanner and the resulting partial volume effects (PVEs). We designed a new algorithm to correct for PVEs by characterizing the geometric interaction between the PET system and the brain activity distribution.
The partial volume correction (PVC) algorithm uses high-resolution volumetric MR images correlated with the PET volume. We used a PET simulator to calculate recovery and cross-contamination factors of identified tissue components in the brain model. These geometry-dependent transfer coefficients form a matrix representing the fraction of true activity from each distinct brain region observed in any given set of regions of interest. This matrix can be inverted to correct for PVEs, independent of the tracer concentrations in each tissue component. A sphere phantom was used to validate the simulated point-spread function of the PET scanner. Accuracy and precision of the PVC method were assessed using a human basal ganglia phantom. A constant contrast experiment was performed to explore the recovery capability and statistic error propagation of PVC in various noise conditions. In addition, a dual-isotope experiment was used to evaluate the ability of the PVC algorithm to recover activity concentrations in small structures surrounded by background activity with a different radioactive half-life. This models the time-variable contrast between regions that is often seen in neuroreceptor studies.
Data from the three-dimensional brain phantom demonstrated a full recovery capability of PVC with less than 10% root mean-square error in terms of absolute values, which decreased to less than 2% when results from four PET slices were averaged. Inaccuracy in the estimation of 18F tracer half-life in the presence of 11C background activity was in the range of 25%-50% before PVC and 0%-6% after PVC, for resolution varying from 6 to 14 mm FWHM. In terms of noise propagation, the degradation of the coefficient of variation after PVC was found to be easily predictable and typically on the order of 25%.
The PVC algorithm allows the correction for PVEs simultaneously in all identified brain regions, independent of tracer levels.
正电子发射断层扫描(PET)测量人脑区域放射性示踪剂浓度的准确性受到扫描仪有限分辨率能力以及由此产生的部分容积效应(PVE)的限制。我们设计了一种新算法,通过描述PET系统与脑活动分布之间的几何相互作用来校正PVE。
部分容积校正(PVC)算法使用与PET体积相关的高分辨率容积磁共振图像。我们使用PET模拟器计算脑模型中已识别组织成分的恢复和交叉污染因子。这些与几何形状相关的转移系数形成一个矩阵,代表在任何给定的感兴趣区域集合中观察到的来自每个不同脑区的真实活性分数。该矩阵可以求逆以校正PVE,而与每个组织成分中的示踪剂浓度无关。使用球形体模验证PET扫描仪的模拟点扩散函数。使用人体基底节体模评估PVC方法的准确性和精密度。进行恒定对比度实验以探索PVC在各种噪声条件下的恢复能力和统计误差传播。此外,使用双同位素实验评估PVC算法恢复被具有不同放射性半衰期的背景活性包围的小结构中活性浓度的能力。这模拟了神经受体研究中常见的区域之间随时间变化的对比度。
来自三维脑体模的数据表明,PVC具有完全恢复能力,绝对值的均方根误差小于10%,当对四个PET切片的结果进行平均时,该误差降至小于2%。在存在11C背景活性的情况下,对于半高宽(FWHM)从6到14毫米变化的分辨率,18F示踪剂半衰期估计的不准确在PVC之前为25%-50%,在PVC之后为0%-6%。就噪声传播而言,发现PVC后变异系数的降低很容易预测,通常在25%左右。
PVC算法允许在所有已识别的脑区中同时校正PVE,与示踪剂水平无关。