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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10016/12146

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Title: Statistical reconstruction methods in PET: resolution limit, noise, edge artifacts and considerations for the design of better scanners
Author(s): Herraiz, J. L.
España, Samuel
Udías, José Manuel
Vaquero, Juan José
Desco, Manuel
Publisher: IEEE
Issued date: Oct-2005
Citation: 2005 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, vol. 4, Oct. 2005, p. 1846-1850
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10016/12146
ISBN: 0-7803-9221-3
ISSN: 1082-3654
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/NSSMIC.2005.1596690
Description: Proceeding of: 2005 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, Puerto Rico, 23-29 Oct. 2005
Abstract: Small animal positron emission tomography (PET) scanners are being increasingly used as a basic measurement tool in modern biomedical research. The new designs and technologies of these scanners and the modern reconstruction methods have allowed to reach high spatial resolution and sensitivity. Despite their successes, some important issues remain to be addressed in high resolution PET imaging. First, iterative reconstruction methods like maximum likelihood-expectation maximization (MLEM) are known to recover resolution, but also to create noisy images and edge artifacts if some kind of regularization is not imposed. Second, the limit of resolution achievable by iterative methods on high resolution scanners is not quantitatively understood. Third, the use of regularization methods like Sieves or maximum a posteriori (MAP) requires them determination of the optimal values of several adjustable parameter that may be object-dependent. In this work we review these problems in high resolution PET and establish that the origin of them is more related with the physical effects involved in the emission and detection of the radiation during the acquisition than with the kind of iterative reconstruction method chosen. These physical effects (positron range, non-collinearity, scatter inside the object and inside the detector materials) cause that the tube of response (TOR) that connects the voxels with a line of response (LOR) is rather thick. This implies that the higher frequencies of the patient organ structures are not recorded by the scanner and therefore cannot be recovered during the reconstruction. As iterations grow, MLEM algorithms try to recover higher frequencies in the image. Once that a certain critic frequency is reached, this only maximizes high frequency noise. Using frequency response analyses techniques, we determine the maximum achievable resolution, before edge artifacts spoil the quality of the image, for a particular scanner as a function of the thickness of the TOR, and independently of the reconstruction method employed. With the same techniques, we can deduce well defined stopping criteria for reconstructions methods. Also, criteria for the highest number of subsets which should be used and how the design of the scanners can be optimized when statistical reconstruction methods are employed, is established.
Sponsor: This work was supported in part by the UCM, Fundación para la investigación biomédica del Hospital Gregorio Marañon”, support from MEC project (BFM2003 04147 C02 01).
Publisher version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/NSSMIC.2005.1596690
Keywords: Terms Image reconstruction
Positron emission tomography
Resolution limit
Noise
Iterative Methods
MLEM
OSEM
Rights: © IEEE
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DBIAB - Book Chapters

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