Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

A high-sensitivity small animal SPECT system

Gregory S Mitchell and Simon R Cherry

Show affiliations


Medical imaging using single gamma-ray-emitting radionuclides typically makes use of parallel hole collimators or pinholes in order to achieve good spatial resolution. However, a tradeoff in sensitivity is inherent in the use of a collimator, and modern preclinical single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) systems detect a very small fraction of emitted gamma rays, often less than 0.1%. A system for small animal SPECT imaging which uses no collimators could potentially achieve very high sensitivity—several tens of percent—with reasonably sized detectors. This would allow two significant improvements in preclinical studies: images could be obtained more rapidly, allowing higher throughput for screening applications, or for dynamic processes to be observed with very good time resolution; and images could be obtained with less radioactive tracer, making possible the in vivo imaging of low-capacity receptor systems, aiding research into new tracer compounds, and reducing the cost and easing the regulatory burden of an experiment. Of course, a system with no collimator will not be able to approach the submillimeter spatial resolutions produced by the most advanced pinhole and collimated systems, but a high-sensitivity system with resolution of order 1 cm could nonetheless find significant and new use in the many molecular imaging applications which do not require good spatial resolution—for example, screening applications for drug development or new imaging agents. Rather than as an alternative to high-resolution SPECT systems, the high-sensitivity system is proposed as a radiotracer alternative to optical imaging for small animals. We have developed a prototype system for mouse imaging applications. The scanner consists of two large, thin, closely spaced scintillation detectors. Simulation studies indicate that a FWHM spatial resolution of 7 mm is possible. In an in vivo mouse imaging study using the 99mTc labeled tracer MAG-3, the sensitivity of the system is measured to be 40%. Simple projection images created by analytically combining the two detectors' data show sufficient resolution to observe the dynamic distribution of the radiotracer in the mouse.


PACS

87.57.uh Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)

87.57.C- Image quality

87.63.-d Non-ionizing radiation equipment and techniques

87.57.un Radiopharmaceuticals

Subjects

Medical physics

Dates

Issue 5 (7 March 2009)

Received 9 October 2008, in final form 10 January 2009

Published 3 February 2009



  1. A high-sensitivity small animal SPECT system

    Gregory S Mitchell and Simon R Cherry 2009 Phys. Med. Biol. 54 1291

  2. Benchmark of PENELOPE code for low-energy photon transport: dose comparisons with MCNP4 and EGS4

    Sung-Joon Ye et al 2004 Phys. Med. Biol. 49 387

  3. The pseudogap in high-temperature superconductors: an experimental survey

    Tom Timusk and Bryan Statt 1999 Rep. Prog. Phys. 62 61

  4. Strongly non-Gaussian statistics of optical soliton parameters due to collisions in the presence of delayed Raman response

    Yeojin Chung and Avner Peleg 2005 Nonlinearity 18 1555

  5. Swift pointing and gravitational-wave bursts from gamma-ray burst events

    Patrick J Sutton et al 2003 Class. Quantum Grav. 20 S815

  6. An ultracool Star's Candidate Planet

    Steven H. Pravdo and Stuart B. Shaklan 2009 ApJ 700 623

  7. The Proposed Giant Planet Orbiting VB 10 Does Not Exist

    Jacob L. Bean et al. 2010 ApJ 711 L19

  8. Using concept mapping for assessment in physics

    Lydia B Austin and Bruce M Shore 1995 Phys. Educ. 30 41

  9. Enhanced atomic Kerr nonlinearity in bright coherent states

    A M Akulshin et al 2004 J. Opt. B: Quantum Semiclass. Opt. 6 491

  10. Reading Hertz's own dipole theory

    B A Aničin 2008 Eur. J. Phys. 29 15

Related review articles

What's this?
View review articles related to this research to gain an insight into the key trends in this subject area. Related review articles are selected based on PACS/MSC codes, and are no more than three years old.

  1. SPECT detectors: the Anger Camera and beyond
  2. Review and current status of SPECT scatter correction
  3. Dynamic single photon emission computed tomography—basic principles and cardiac applications
More

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.