Sponsor:
This work is partially funded by the CD-TEAM Project, CENIT Program, Spanish Ministerio de Industria, and with grants from the Ministerio de Educaci6n y Ciencia, projects TEC2007-64731 and TEC2008-06715-C02-01
Small animal PETICT devices provide anatomical and molecular imaging at the same time, enabling the joint visualization and analysis of both modalities. An accurate
PET/CT alignment is required to correctly interpret these studies. A proper calibration procedSmall animal PETICT devices provide anatomical and molecular imaging at the same time, enabling the joint visualization and analysis of both modalities. An accurate
PET/CT alignment is required to correctly interpret these studies. A proper calibration procedure is essential for small
animal imaging, since resolution is much higher than in human devices. This work presents an alignment phantom and a method
that enable a reliable and replicable measurement of the geometrical relationship between PET and CT modules. The phantom can be built with laboratory materials, and is used to estimate the rigid spatial transformation that aligns both modalities. consists of three glass capillaries located in noncoplanar
triangular geometry and filled with FDG, so they are
easily identified in both modalities. The method is based on
automatic line detection and localization of the corresponding
points between the lines on both modalities, which allows
calculating the rigid alignment parameters. Different geometric
configurations of the phantom (i.e. different angles and distances
between capillaries) were tested to assess the repeatability of the
calculations. To measure the alignment precision achieved, we
attached two additional sodium point sources to the phantom,
which were neglected in the registration process. Our results
show that the accuracy of the alignment estimation, measured as
average misalignment of the Na sources, is below half the PET
resolution. The alternative settings for the phantom layout did
not affect this result, indicating the low dependency of the
alignment calculated with the actual phantom layout. Our
approach allows measuring the PETICT transformation
parameters using an in-house built phantom and with low
computational effort and high accuracy, demonstrating that the
proposed phantom is suitable for alignment calibration of dual
modality systems on a real environment.[+][-]