Abstract
Dedicated gamma cameras for specific clinical application are representing a new trend in Nuclear Medicine. They are based on Position Sensitive Photo Multiplier Tubes (PSPMT). The main intrinsic limitation of large area PSPMT (5″ diameter) is the photocathode glass window. Coupling to a planar scintillation crystal strongly affects the useful active area and the intrinsic spatial resolution. To overcome this limitation at University of Rome “La Sapienza” was developed the first 5″ diameter gamma camera consisting of a Hamamatsu R3292 PSPMT coupled to 50 × 50 YAP: Ce scintillating array. The array pixel size is 2 × 2 mm 2 and the overall dimension of multi-crystal is 10 × 10 × 1 cm 3. Resistive chains were used to calculate the centroid. The scintillating array produces a focused light spot minimising the spread introduced by PSPMT glass window. The intrinsic spatial resolution varied between 2 and 2.7 mm. The position linearity and useful active area resulted in good agreement with intrinsic one obtained by light spot irradiation. The real limitation was the poor energy resolution of an individual crystal (40%) and the poor uniformity response of PSPMT (within ±15%). A correction matrix was then carried out by which a 57% of total energy resolution was obtained for the whole matrix. The camera is currently operating as Single Photon Emission Mammography (SPEM) and it is producing breast functional images for malignant tumour detection using the same geometry as standard X-ray mammography.
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