Abstract
This project’s goal is to design a SPECT insert for a clinical MRI system for simultaneous brain SPECT/MR imaging, with a high-sensitivity collimator and high-resolution detectors. We have compared eight collimator designs, four multi-pinhole and four multi-slit slit-slat configurations. The collimation was designed for a system with rings of 25 $5\times 5~\hbox{cm}$ detectors. We introduce the concept of 1/2-pinhole and 1/2-slit, which are transaxially shared between two adjacent detectors. Analytical geometric efficiency was calculated for an activity distribution corresponding to a human brain and a range of intrinsic detector resolutions ${\rm R}_i$ and target resolutions ${\rm R}_t$ at the centre of the FOV. Noise-free data were simulated with and without depth-of-interaction (DOI) information, 0.8 mm ${\rm R}_i$ and 10 mm ${\rm R}_t$ FWHM, and reconstructed for uniform, Defrise, Derenzo, and Zubal brain phantoms. Comparing the multi-pinhole and multi-slit slit-slat collimators, the former gives better reconstructed uniformity and transaxial resolution, while the latter gives better axial resolution. Although the $2 \times 2$ -pinhole and 2-slit designs give the highest sensitivities, they result in a sub-optimal utilisation of the detector FOV. The best options are therefore the $ 5+ 2 1/2$ -pinhole and the $1 + 2 1/2$ -slit systems, with sensitivities of $1.8 \times {10^{ - 4}}$ and $3.2 \times {10^{ - 4}}$ , respectively. Noiseless brain phantom reconstructions with the multi-pinhole collimator are slightly superior as compared to slit-slat, in terms of symmetry and accuracy of the activity distribution, but the same is not true when noise is included. DOI information reduces artefacts and improves uniformity in geometric phantoms. Further evaluation is needed with prototype collimators.
Highlights
A SIMULTANEOUS SPECT/MR system could provide combined functional (SPECT and MRI) and morphological information (MRI), correlated in space and time
The evaluation of different collimator designs focused on the trade-off between sensitivity and spatial resolution, the space constraints due to the MR system, and the limited angular sampling due to the need for a stationary system
The distance between the collimator and the detector is small so that the SPECT insert can fit inside the MRI system and the imaging FOV is large in comparison to the detector size
Summary
A SIMULTANEOUS SPECT/MR system could provide combined functional (SPECT and MRI) and morphological information (MRI), correlated in space and time. SPECT provides the possibility to target different biomarkers using multiple radionuclides simultaneously, and to label compounds. Manuscript received August 29, 2014; revised December 19, 2014; accepted June 11, 2015. Date of publication August 06, 2015; date of current version August 14, 2015. This work was done as part of the INSERT collaboration supported by EC under the FP7-HEALTH program (305311).
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