Abstract

Images produced by gamma camera coincidence (GCC) techniques have a much lower count-density than those produced by dedicated PET scanners. The authors examine the effects of attenuation and attenuation correction on GCC images using gamma-camera emission data and PET emission and transmission data from phantom and human studies. The effects studied include contrast, noise, and general image quality. Results show that lung lesion contrast is improved but the signal-to-noise ratio is slightly degraded by the application of attenuation correction. Additionally, the corrected images do not contain the distortions of the uncorrected images and they more accurately show the activity distribution of the imaged object. The noise studies suggest that statistically appropriate transmission data for implementing an attenuation correction can be acquired in a small fraction of the time used for an emission scan.

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