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Activity painting: PET images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique

The aim of this work was to develop a novel phantom that supports the construction of highly reproducible phantoms with arbitrary activity distributions for PET imaging. It could offer a methodology for answering questions related to texture measurements in PET imaging. The basic idea is to move a p...

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Autores principales: Forgacs, Attila, Kallos-Balogh, Piroska, Nagy, Ferenc, Krizsan, Aron K., Garai, Ildiko, Tron, Lajos, Dahlbom, Magnus, Balkay, Laszlo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6347296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30682024
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207658
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author Forgacs, Attila
Kallos-Balogh, Piroska
Nagy, Ferenc
Krizsan, Aron K.
Garai, Ildiko
Tron, Lajos
Dahlbom, Magnus
Balkay, Laszlo
author_facet Forgacs, Attila
Kallos-Balogh, Piroska
Nagy, Ferenc
Krizsan, Aron K.
Garai, Ildiko
Tron, Lajos
Dahlbom, Magnus
Balkay, Laszlo
author_sort Forgacs, Attila
collection PubMed
description The aim of this work was to develop a novel phantom that supports the construction of highly reproducible phantoms with arbitrary activity distributions for PET imaging. It could offer a methodology for answering questions related to texture measurements in PET imaging. The basic idea is to move a point source on a 3-D trajectory in the field of view, while continuously acquiring data. The reconstruction results in a 3-D activity concentration map according to the pathway of the point source. A (22)Na calibration point source was attached to a high precision robotic arm system, where the 3-D movement was software controlled. 3-D activity distributions of a homogeneous cube, a sphere, a spherical shell and a heart shape were simulated. These distributions were used to measure uniformity and to characterize reproducibility. Two potential applications using the lesion simulation method are presented: evaluation in changes of textural properties related to the position in the PET field of view; scanner comparison based on visual and quantitative evaluation of texture features. A lesion with volume of 50x50x50 mm(3) can be simulated during approximately 1 hour. The reproducibility of the movement was found to be >99%. The coefficients of variation of the voxels within a simulated homogeneous cube was 2.34%. Based on 5 consecutive and independent measurements of a 36 mm diameter hot sphere, the coefficient of variation of the mean activity concentration was 0.68%. We obtained up to 18% differences within the values of investigated textural indexes, when measuring a lesion in different radial positions of the PET field of view. In comparison of two different human PET scanners the percentage differences between heterogeneity parameters were in the range of 5–55%. After harmonizing the voxel sizes this range reduced to 2–16%. The general activity distributions provided by the two different vendor show high similarity visually. For the demonstration of the flexibility of this method, the same pattern was also simulated on a small animal PET scanner giving similar results, both quantitatively and visually. 3-D motion of a point source in the PET field of view is capable to create an irregular shaped activity distribution with high reproducibility.
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spelling pubmed-63472962019-02-02 Activity painting: PET images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique Forgacs, Attila Kallos-Balogh, Piroska Nagy, Ferenc Krizsan, Aron K. Garai, Ildiko Tron, Lajos Dahlbom, Magnus Balkay, Laszlo PLoS One Research Article The aim of this work was to develop a novel phantom that supports the construction of highly reproducible phantoms with arbitrary activity distributions for PET imaging. It could offer a methodology for answering questions related to texture measurements in PET imaging. The basic idea is to move a point source on a 3-D trajectory in the field of view, while continuously acquiring data. The reconstruction results in a 3-D activity concentration map according to the pathway of the point source. A (22)Na calibration point source was attached to a high precision robotic arm system, where the 3-D movement was software controlled. 3-D activity distributions of a homogeneous cube, a sphere, a spherical shell and a heart shape were simulated. These distributions were used to measure uniformity and to characterize reproducibility. Two potential applications using the lesion simulation method are presented: evaluation in changes of textural properties related to the position in the PET field of view; scanner comparison based on visual and quantitative evaluation of texture features. A lesion with volume of 50x50x50 mm(3) can be simulated during approximately 1 hour. The reproducibility of the movement was found to be >99%. The coefficients of variation of the voxels within a simulated homogeneous cube was 2.34%. Based on 5 consecutive and independent measurements of a 36 mm diameter hot sphere, the coefficient of variation of the mean activity concentration was 0.68%. We obtained up to 18% differences within the values of investigated textural indexes, when measuring a lesion in different radial positions of the PET field of view. In comparison of two different human PET scanners the percentage differences between heterogeneity parameters were in the range of 5–55%. After harmonizing the voxel sizes this range reduced to 2–16%. The general activity distributions provided by the two different vendor show high similarity visually. For the demonstration of the flexibility of this method, the same pattern was also simulated on a small animal PET scanner giving similar results, both quantitatively and visually. 3-D motion of a point source in the PET field of view is capable to create an irregular shaped activity distribution with high reproducibility. Public Library of Science 2019-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6347296/ /pubmed/30682024 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207658 Text en © 2019 Forgacs et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Forgacs, Attila
Kallos-Balogh, Piroska
Nagy, Ferenc
Krizsan, Aron K.
Garai, Ildiko
Tron, Lajos
Dahlbom, Magnus
Balkay, Laszlo
Activity painting: PET images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique
title Activity painting: PET images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique
title_full Activity painting: PET images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique
title_fullStr Activity painting: PET images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique
title_full_unstemmed Activity painting: PET images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique
title_short Activity painting: PET images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique
title_sort activity painting: pet images of freely defined activity distributions applying a novel phantom technique
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6347296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30682024
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207658
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