Nuclear Medicine and Biology
Volume 36, Issue 5 , Pages 551-559, July 2009

Quantitative small animal PET imaging with nonconventional nuclides

Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA

Received 20 October 2008; received in revised form 20 December 2008; accepted 27 January 2009. published online 08 May 2009.

Abstract 

Positron Emission Tomography (PET) has gained a tremendous momentum recently for clinical applications notably with the availability of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose for staging and evaluation of therapy efficacy in various types of cancers. Nonconventional positron emitting nuclides are now being investigated for the development of novel imaging and therapeutic strategies. However, these nuclides have less than ideal imaging properties. This article compares the performance for imaging of nonconventional nuclides such as 61Cu, 68Ga, 86Y and 94mTc with the standard imaging nuclide 18F for high-resolution small animal PET imaging. Quantitative imaging performance was evaluated in terms of spatial resolution and hot spheres recovery coefficients from image resolution and image quality phantoms representing the mouse. The data were reconstructed using algorithms of 2D filtered-back-projection, 2D ordered-subsets expectation maximization and maximum-a-posteriori. It is shown that the spatial resolution point spread function can be well explained by a double-gaussian function due to the generally long range of the positron. We show that, with the knowledge of the measured point spread functions, the accurate activity concentration in small lesions can be recovered when imaging with long-range positron emitters.

Keywords: microPET, Nonconventional nuclides, Cascade γ-rays, Spatial resolution, Recovery coefficients

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PII: S0969-8051(09)00042-0

doi:10.1016/j.nucmedbio.2009.01.019

Nuclear Medicine and Biology
Volume 36, Issue 5 , Pages 551-559, July 2009