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Attenuation-emission alignment in cardiac PET/CT based on consistency conditions.
Alessio, Adam M; Kinahan, Paul E; Champley, Kyle M; Caldwell, James H.
Afiliación
  • Alessio AM; Department of Radiology, University of Washington Medical Center, 4000 15th Avenue NE, Box 357987, Seattle, Washington 98195-7987, USA. aalessio@u.washington.edu
Med Phys ; 37(3): 1191-200, 2010 Mar.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20384256
PURPOSE: In cardiac PET and PET/CT imaging, misaligned transmission and emission images are a common problem due to respiratory and cardiac motion. This misalignment leads to erroneous attenuation correction and can cause errors in perfusion mapping and quantification. This study develops and tests a method for automated alignment of attenuation and emission data. METHODS: The CT-based attenuation map is iteratively transformed until the attenuation corrected emission data minimize an objective function based on the Radon consistency conditions. The alignment process is derived from previous work by Welch et al. ["Attenuation correction in PET using consistency information," IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 45, 3134-3141 (1998)] for stand-alone PET imaging. The process was evaluated with the simulated data and measured patient data from multiple cardiac ammonia PET/CT exams. The alignment procedure was applied to simulations of five different noise levels with three different initial attenuation maps. For the measured patient data, the alignment procedure was applied to eight attenuation-emission combinations with initially acceptable alignment and eight combinations with unacceptable alignment. The initially acceptable alignment studies were forced out of alignment a known amount and quantitatively evaluated for alignment and perfusion accuracy. The initially unacceptable studies were compared to the proposed aligned images in a blinded side-by-side review. RESULTS: The proposed automatic alignment procedure reduced errors in the simulated data and iteratively approaches global minimum solutions with the patient data. In simulations, the alignment procedure reduced the root mean square error to less than 5 mm and reduces the axial translation error to less than 1 mm. In patient studies, the procedure reduced the translation error by > 50% and resolved perfusion artifacts after a known misalignment for the eight initially acceptable patient combinations. The side-by-side review of the proposed aligned attenuation-emission maps and initially misaligned attenuation-emission maps revealed that reviewers preferred the proposed aligned maps in all cases, except one inconclusive case. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed alignment procedure offers an automatic method to reduce attenuation correction artifacts in cardiac PET/CT and provides a viable supplement to subjective manual realignment tools.
Asunto(s)

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Algoritmos / Interpretación de Imagen Asistida por Computador / Aumento de la Imagen / Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X / Técnica de Sustracción / Artefactos / Tomografía de Emisión de Positrones / Corazón Tipo de estudio: Evaluation_studies Límite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: Med Phys Año: 2010 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Estados Unidos Pais de publicación: Estados Unidos

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Algoritmos / Interpretación de Imagen Asistida por Computador / Aumento de la Imagen / Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X / Técnica de Sustracción / Artefactos / Tomografía de Emisión de Positrones / Corazón Tipo de estudio: Evaluation_studies Límite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: Med Phys Año: 2010 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Estados Unidos Pais de publicación: Estados Unidos