Capabilities of multi-pinhole SPECT with two stationary detectors for in vivo rat imaging

被引:0
作者
Jan P. Janssen
Jan V. Hoffmann
Takayuki Kanno
Naoko Nose
Jan-Peter Grunz
Masahisa Onoguchi
Xinyu Chen
Constantin Lapa
Andreas K. Buck
Takahiro Higuchi
机构
[1] University Hospital Würzburg,Department of Nuclear Medicine
[2] University Hospital Würzburg,Comprehensive Heart Failure Centre
[3] Kanazawa University,Department of Quantum Medical Technology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences
[4] Okayama University,Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences
[5] University Hospital Würzburg,Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
[6] University of Augsburg,Nuclear Medicine, Medical Faculty
来源
Scientific Reports | / 10卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We aimed to investigate the image quality of the U-SPECT5/CT E-Class a micro single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) system with two large stationary detectors for visualization of rat hearts and bones using clinically available 99mTc-labelled tracers. Sensitivity, spatial resolution, uniformity and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) of the small-animal SPECT scanner were investigated in phantom studies using an ultra-high-resolution rat and mouse multi-pinhole collimator (UHR-RM). Point source, hot-rod, and uniform phantoms with 99mTc-solution were scanned for high-count performance assessment and count levels equal to animal scans, respectively. Reconstruction was performed using the similarity-regulated ordered-subsets expectation maximization (SROSEM) algorithm with Gaussian smoothing. Rats were injected with ~ 100 MBq [99mTc]Tc-MIBI or ~ 150 MBq [99mTc]Tc-HMDP and received multi-frame micro-SPECT imaging after tracer distribution. Animal scans were reconstructed for three different acquisition times and post-processed with different sized Gaussian filters. Following reconstruction, CNR was calculated and image quality evaluated by three independent readers on a five-point scale from 1 = “very poor” to 5 = “very good”. Point source sensitivity was 567 cps/MBq and radioactive rods as small as 1.2 mm were resolved with the UHR-RM collimator. Collimator-dependent uniformity was 55.5%. Phantom CNR improved with increasing rod size, filter size and activity concentration. Left ventricle and bone structures were successfully visualized in rat experiments. Image quality was strongly affected by the extent of post-filtering, whereas scan time did not have substantial influence on visual assessment. Good image quality was achieved for resolution range greater than 1.8 mm in bone and 2.8 mm in heart. The recently introduced small animal SPECT system with two stationary detectors and UHR-RM collimator is capable to provide excellent image quality in heart and bone scans in a rat using standardized reconstruction parameters and appropriate post-filtering. However, there are still challenges in achieving maximum system resolution in the sub-millimeter range with in vivo settings under limited injection dose and acquisition time.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 64 条
  • [1] King MA(2002)Introduction to the physics of molecular imaging with radioactive tracers in small animals J. Cell Biochem. Suppl. 39 221-230
  • [2] Pretorius PH(2005)Small animal SPECT and its place in the matrix of molecular imaging technologies Phys. Med. Biol. 50 R45-61
  • [3] Farncombe T(2007)The pinhole: Gateway to ultra-high-resolution three-dimensional radionuclide imaging Eur. J. Nucl. Med. Mol. Imaging 34 151-161
  • [4] Beekman FJ(2011)Performance characterization of the Inveon preclinical small-animal PET/SPECT/CT system for multimodality imaging Eur. J. Nucl. Med. Mol. Imaging 38 742-752
  • [5] Meikle SR(2014)Performance evaluation of the eXplore speCZT preclinical imaging system Ann. Nucl. Med. 28 484-497
  • [6] Kench P(2015)Ultra-high-sensitivity submillimeter mouse SPECT J. Nucl. Med. 56 470-475
  • [7] Kassiou M(2008)Small-animal SPECT and SPECT/CT: Important tools for preclinical investigation J. Nucl. Med. 49 1651-1663
  • [8] Banati RB(2004)FastSPECT II: A second-generation high-resolution dynamic SPECT imager IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 51 631-635
  • [9] Beekman F(2007)Submillimeter total-body murine imaging with U-SPECT-I J. Nucl. Med. 48 487-493
  • [10] van der Have F(2009)U-SPECT-II: An ultra-high-resolution device for molecular small-animal imaging J. Nucl. Med. 50 599-605