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 can extract true coincidences from multiple coincidences which have heretofore been discarded, thereby improving detection sensitivity at high radioactive concentration and improving a dynamic range.
As shown in
The time width for determining a positron nuclide (coincidence time width) 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. The coincidence time width is also limited by the locations of positron nuclides and the ring diameter of the detectors to detect. A coincidence time width of around 4 nanoseconds or less will confine the imaging field of view of existing clinical PET devices.
As a PET device having extremely high timing resolution, a TOF-PET device has been developed which can improve the device sensitivity by limiting positions on a line of response, using information on a difference in time of flight (hereinafter, abbreviated as TOF) between a pair of annihilation radiations. With the current timing resolution of around 500 picoseconds, the device sensitivity has not been dramatically improved yet.
The coincidence method performs a positron nuclide determination in a finite time. A random coincidence such as shown in
Multiple coincidence events may include true coincidences. With conventional PET devices, however, there has been no established technique for determination. As shown in
PET devices with improved sensitivity have recently been developed which have an increased ring length and a reduced ring diameter for close proximity imaging. In such devices, the probability of multiple coincidences is higher than in conventional PET devices.
A technology for identifying the incident directions of respective annihilation radiations to identify a true coincidence from multiple coincidences by using CZT detectors or the like having extremely high energy resolution and using the principle of a Compton camera has been under study (Patent Document 1 and Non-Patent Document 3).
According to such a method, true coincidences can be analytically extracted in principle. However, CZT detectors and the like have yet to be put to practical use as PET detectors, and can utilize only Compton scattering events inside the detectors. There has thus been a problem of rather limited event availability, i.e., low detector sensitivity.
Patent Literature 1: Japanese Translation of International Patent Application No. 2008-522168
Non-Patent Literature 1: H. M. Dent, W. F. Jones, and M. E. Casey, “A real time digital coincidence processor for positron emission tomography,” IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. Vol. 33, 556-559, 1986
Non-Patent Literature 2: D. F. Newport, H. M. Dent, M. E. Casey, and D. W. Bouldin, “Coincidence Detection and Selection in Positron Emission Tomography Using VLSI,” IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. Vol. 36, 1052-1055, 1989
Non-Patent Literature 3: G. Chinn, C. S. Levin, “A method to reject random coincidences and extract true from multiple coincidences in PET using 3-D detectors,” Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 5249-5254, 2008.
The coincidence determination method of the conventional PET device shown in
The present invention has been achieved in order to solve the foregoing conventional problem. It is thus an object thereof to extract a true coincidence from multiple coincidences which have heretofore been discarded, thereby improving detection sensitivity at high radioactive concentration and contributing to an improved dynamic range.
The present invention has been achieved in view of the fact that if there are lines of response detected as multiple coincidences, priorities can be set and a line of response to acquire can be determined by an extremely simple method based on the radioactivity distribution and information upon detection. The foregoing object has been achieved by the provision of a coincidence determination method of a PET device for regarding and counting a pair of annihilation radiations detected within a predetermined time as occurring from the same nuclide, the method including setting a priority of a line of response to acquire and extracting a true coincidence from multiple coincidences by using information on a detection time difference if a plurality of coincidences are detected with the predetermined time.
Here, a coincidence having the smallest detection time difference may be determined to be and extracted as a true coincidence from among the multiple coincidences.
Alternatively, a coincidence having a detection time difference smaller than a threshold may be determined to be and extracted as a true coincidence from among the multiple coincidences.
The threshold may be variable.
If there are a plurality of coincidences having a detection time difference smaller than the threshold, a single line of response the closest to a center of a field of view may be selected.
Alternatively, if there are a plurality of coincidences having a detection time difference smaller than the threshold, a single line of response having the highest total detected energy may be selected.
The present invention also provides a coincidence determination apparatus of 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 detection time difference between a plurality of the radiation detectors falls within a predetermined time; and
means for setting a priority of a line of response to acquire and extracting a true coincidence from multiple coincidences by using information on the detection time difference if a plurality of coincidences are detected with the predetermined time.
According to the present invention, true coincidences are extracted from multiple coincidences which have heretofore been discarded. This improves the detection sensitivity at high radioactive concentration and contributes to an improved dynamic range. The present invention is simply applicable to an existing PET device having high timing resolution, and is considered to be particularly effective for an ultra-high sensitivity PET device (such as a whole-body simultaneous imaging PET device) with a large ring length and a small ring diameter.
Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the drawings.
A PET device typically images a subject in the center of its field of view. True coincidences therefore tend to be found near the center of the field of view, and random coincidences are uniformly found within the field of view. Most of noise components in multiple coincidences are considered to be random coincidences. Coincidences with a small detection time difference can thus be selected as true coincidences with high probability.
A first embodiment of the present invention has been achieved in view of the foregoing. As shown in
The processing of the present embodiment is relatively simple.
Since multiple coincidences do not always include a true coincidence, the extraction of a single event from multiple coincidences all the time can cause an increase of noise components at high radioactivity.
Then, in a second embodiment of the present invention, as shown in
In the second embodiment, the number of events to be determined is not limited to one. With practical radioactivity levels, a plurality of true coincidences are considered to be less likely to be detected among multiple coincidences. As shown in
Then, like a third embodiment shown in
A true coincidence is likely to be detected with high energy as compared to a scatter coincidence shown in
A simulation of a whole-body simultaneous imaging PET device was performed. The device used block detectors including an array of 2.9×2.9×20-mm-thick LSO scintillators to constitute a detector ring having a ring diameter of 84 cm. Three types of detector rings having a ring length of 64 cm, 15 cm, and 130 cm in the direction of the body axis were simulated. 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 600 picoseconds and a coincidence time width of 6 nanoseconds.
NECR is an index for evaluating the effective count characteristics of a cylindrical phantom in consideration of the ratio of apparent noise components such as random coincidences. NECR, frequently used to evaluate the performance of a PET device, is expressed by the following equation (see S. C. Strother, M. E. Casey, E. J. Hoffman, IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci., vol. 37, 783-788, 1990):
NECR=T2/(T+S+R)
Here, T is the rate of true coincidences, S is the rate of scatter coincidences, and R is the rate of random coincidences. The result suggests that the application of the present invention provides an improvement of around 20% in image quality. An improvement effect superior to the case of extracting true coincidences at random (random select) was also observed.
At present, high sensitivity PET devices are being developed like a close proximity imaging PET device. Since the coincidence time width is limited by detector arrangement, the effect of multiple coincidences is considered to increase. The method for determining multiple coincidences can thus be an essential element technology for achieving an ultra-high sensitivity PET device.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2010/055185 | 3/25/2010 | WO | 00 | 9/18/2012 |