The present invention relates to a coincidence determination method and apparatus for a PET device, and more particularly to a coincidence determination method and apparatus for a PET device which are suitably used for a PET device that widely covers a whole body, and can make full use of potentiality of such a PET device.
Current PET devices typically include a ring-type arrangement of detectors with a length of 15 cm or so, which can only image a part of a subject at a time. For purposes such as improving test throughput, like shown in
As shown in
In the drawings, 22 denotes detector rings (hereinafter, also referred to simply as rings) that constitute the PET device 20 and include a plurality of radiation detectors (hereinafter, also referred to simply as detectors) which are arranged on a circumference, for example; 24 denotes position and time information detection sections that detect detected positions and time information of radiations in the respective detectors; and 26 denotes a coincidence section that determines a coincidence to be present if a difference in detection time between a plurality of detectors 22 falls within a predetermined coincidence time width.
A PET device that covers as much area of a whole body as possible can image the whole body with high sensitivity. To acquire complete data by a conventional coincidence technique such as shown in
The coincidence time width for determining a positron nuclide is determined by the timing resolution and the size of the field of view of the PET device. At present, PET devices having an improved timing resolution of around 500 picoseconds are developed. Annihilation radiations occurring in the center of the field of view are detected with a small time difference. The detection time difference increases as the position of the positron nuclide deviates from the center of the field of view. The detection time difference with which annihilation radiations reach detectors thus depends on the timing resolution and the size of the field of view. A PET device that widely covers a whole body also produces a time difference because of a ring difference between the detectors to detect (the distance between the detector rings for a respective pair of annihilation radiations to reach) aside from the timing resolution and the size of the field of view.
Patent Literatures 1 and 2 propose a method for improving the S/N of a PET/CT device by calculating the size of an object to be measured by using CT in advance and setting coincidence time widths for lines of response that have respective different maximum detection time differences. However, the technique needs optimization of coincidence time widths for each object to be measured, while detection time differences within a cross section are limited under the time resolution of 500 ps or so. Besides, the technique absolutely requires CT information and is difficult to implement by hardware.
A PET device that widely covers a whole body is capable of high sensitive imaging by covering as much area of a subject with rings as possible. This greatly enlarges ring differences, however, and effective use needs to be made of oblique lines of response. As compared to conventional PET devices, oblique lines of response reach detectors with greater time differences. Simply increasing the coincidence time width can degrade image quality due to the acquisition of extra noise data. Moreover, since the PET device that widely covers a whole body has high sensitivity, an extremely large amount of data needs to be acquired as compared to a conventional PET device.
Aside from the timing resolution, the maximum detection time difference of an arbitrary coincidence depends on the distance for which the line of response passes the field of view. The coincidence time width needed for each coincidence can be calculated in advance from the geometrical arrangement of the detectors and the size of the field of view. For an arbitrary coincidence, a radiation source that produces the maximum detection time difference falls on an intersection with the field of view.
Here, Rd is the ring difference, R is the ring diameter, offset is the offset from the center of the field of view, c is the velocity of light, and TR is the timing resolution of the detectors.
The detection time difference based on the ring difference is determined by the geometrical arrangement of the detector rings and can thus be calculated in advance.
The present invention has been achieved in view of the foregoing. The present invention solves the foregoing problems by the provision of a coincidence determination method for a PET device that regards and counts a pair of annihilation radiations detected within a predetermined time as occurring from the same nuclide, the method including changing a coincidence time width according to a maximum detection time difference.
Here, the maximum detection time difference may be calculated in advance according to a geometrical arrangement of detectors and a size of a field of view.
The maximum detection time difference may be calculated in advance according to a ring difference that is a distance between detector rings for the respective pair of annihilation radiations to reach.
The present invention also solves the foregoing problems by the provision of a coincidence determination method for a
PET device that regards and counts a pair of annihilation radiations detected within a predetermined time as occurring from the same nuclide, the method including changing a maximum detection time difference and/or a coincidence time width according to a ring difference that is a distance between detector rings for the respective pair of annihilation radiations to reach.
The present invention also provides a coincidence determination apparatus for a PET device, including:
a plurality of radiation detectors for detecting radiations occurring from a nuclide;
means for detecting detection times of radiations in the respective radiation detectors;
means for determining a coincidence to be present when a difference in detection time between a plurality of the radiation detectors is within a predetermined time; and
means for changing a coincidence time width according to a maximum detection time difference.
The present invention also provides a coincidence determination apparatus for a PET device including:
a plurality of radiation detectors for detecting radiations occurring from a nuclide;
means for detecting detection times of radiations in the respective radiation detectors;
means for determining a coincidence to be present when a difference in detection time between a plurality of the radiation detectors is within a predetermined time; and
means for changing a coincidence time width according to a ring difference that is a distance between detector rings for a respective pair of annihilation radiations to reach.
According to the present invention, an appropriate coincidence time width is set according to a ring difference. This can prevent the inclusion of extra noise data.
According to the present invention, as shown in
The present invention can be one of elemental technologies for achieving a PET device that widely covers a whole body. The present invention can be used to make full use of the potentiality of the PET device that widely covers a whole body.
The present invention can be implemented by adding only a detection time difference calculation section and a ring difference determination section to a conventional coincidence circuit system, and is thus suited to hardware-based online processing.
As shown in
Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the drawings.
The coincidence determination system shown in
The detection time difference calculation section 30 calculates a detection time difference (step 110). The ring difference calculation section 32 calculates a ring difference (step 120). The determination section 34 judges the detection time difference and the ring difference (step 130). Data can thus be acquired with an optimum coincidence time width for each ring difference. The determination section 34 may create a table of maximum detection time differences allowable for respective ring differences such as shown in
A PET device that widely covers a whole body includes an enormous number of detectors. The technique of an open PET device (see Non-Patent Literature 5) may be able to be used to create a gap between detector rings as in
A simulation of a PET device that widely covers a whole body was performed. The device used block detectors including an array of 2.9×2.9×20-mm-thick LSO scintillators to constitute a multiple detector ring having a ring diameter of 66 cm and a length of 120 cm. A cylindrical phantom of 20 cm in diameter and 1 m in length was placed in the ring center.
The detectors had a timing resolution of 500 picoseconds and a coincidence time width of 9 nanoseconds.
NECR is an index for evaluating the image quality of a cylindrical phantom. NECR, frequently used to evaluate the performance of a PET device, is expressed by the following equation:
NECR=T
2/(T+S+R) (2)
Here, T is the true coincidence rate, S is the scatter coincidence rate, and R is the random coincidence rate. The result suggested that the application of the present invention improves image quality.
At present, a PET device that widely covers a whole body has not been practiced yet in terms of cost, an increased amount of data to be processed, etc. There is a good possibility, however, that such problems can be solved by technological innovation in the future. If a PET device that widely covers a whole body is realized, the optimization of the coincidence determination technique will be needed and the present invention will be able to be applied.
10 . . . imaging target
12 . . . positron nuclide
20 . . . PET device
22 . . . detector ring
24 . . . position and time information detection section
26 . . . coincidence section
30 . . . detection time difference calculation section
32 . . . ring difference calculation section
34 . . . determination section
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2010/056254 | 4/6/2010 | WO | 00 | 10/4/2012 |