This invention is directed to a collimator and collimation techniques. Specifically, the invention is directed to a collimator and method for collimation wherein the collimator combines the resolution and sensitivity properties of pinhole Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) imaging with the 2D complete-sampling properties of fan-beam collimators.
Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) is a nuclear-medicine imaging modality capable of providing 3D maps of in vivo radiopharmaceutical distributions. It is very similar to conventional nuclear medicine planar imaging, but in SPECT a gamma ray camera is used. In the same way that a plain X-ray is a 2-dimensional (2D) view of a 3-dimensional (3D) structure, the image obtained by a gamma ray camera is a 2D view of the 3D distribution of a radionuclide. An important objective in nuclear medicine is to make SPECT more useful by utilizing and improving its quantitative capabilities. The availability of SPECT is well established. The cost-effectiveness of SPECT as a diagnostic imaging modality is demonstrated by the large number of installed systems worldwide. SPECT is an important clinical imaging modality and research tool, not only in the United States, but throughout the world. Consequently, the qualitative and quantitative improvement of SPECT has great clinical and research significance.
SPECT imaging is performed by using a gamma camera to acquire multiple 2-D images (projections), from multiple angles. SPECT scans typically are performed on general-purpose instruments with a collimator made of dense material such as lead. The collimator restricts the photons from the radioactive decay to come from certain lines of sight. A single view records photons for a period of time while the camera is motionless. The camera is then rotated by a few degrees and a second projection is recorded. From a large set (˜120) of projections, the 3D distribution of the radiolabeled pharmaceutical can be reconstructed through computer algorithms.
SPECT has many pharmaceuticals that are useful for imaging function of various organs. For example, cardiac imaging is performed to assess left ventricular function with gated radionuclide ventriculography, and to evaluate myocardial perfusion with agents such as thallium-201 and Tc-99m labeled compounds (Sestamibi, Tetrofosmin); I-123 labeled MIBG has been used as a method for measuring cardiac sympathetic innervation. Also, Biscisate, Sestamibi, HMPAO, IMP, and ECD can be used with SPECT for visualizing cerebral blood perfusion. TRODAT and other compounds are useful for imaging dopamine receptors for differential diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. Amyloid plaque imaging is used in the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease. Tc-99m-labeled Sestamibi is also used to image breast cancer. Limb imaging is used for sarcoma, osteomyelitis (infection), and stress fractures.
A collimator is a device that filters a stream of photons so that only those traveling parallel to a specified direction are allowed through. Collimators are used in SPECT imaging because it is currently not possible to focus radiation with such short wavelengths into an image through the use of lenses as is routine with electromagnetic radiation at optical or near-optical wavelengths.
Without a collimator, rays from all directions would be recorded by the gamma ray camera; for example, gamma rays from the top of a specimen to be imaged may travel in both upward and downward directions. Thus, the image of the top of the specimen may be recorded at both the top and bottom of the gamma ray detector. Such an effect would occur for all parts of the specimen, resulting in an image so blurred and indistinct as to be useless.
When a collimator made of lead or other materials that absorb instead of pass gamma ray radiation is used, only gamma rays that are traveling nearly parallel to the openings in the collimator pass through the collimator to the gamma ray camera. Any other gamma rays are absorbed by hitting the collimator surface or the sides of an opening. This ensures that only gamma rays perpendicular to the gamma ray camera are recorded. In other words, gamma rays from the top of a specimen can only pass through the top of the collimator, thus ensuring that a clear image is produced.
Although collimators improve the resolution of the recorded image by blocking incoming radiation that would result in a blurred image, by necessity they also reduce the intensity (sensitivity) of the recorded image. In fact, most lead collimators let less than 1% of incident gamma rays through to the gamma ray camera.
The choice of collimator is a key decision in the quality of the resulting reconstruction. There are multiple types of existing collimators: parallel-beam, fan-beam, cone-beam, pinhole, and some other custom collimators. These collimators determine the trade-off between sensitivity (the number of recorded photons), the resolution (how well the line of a particular photon from the specimen to the gamma ray camera is known) and the field of view (the maximum size of the object to be imaged). Within a collimator family (e.g., parallel-beam), trade-offs are also possible, such as using longer lead holes to get better resolution at the cost of reduced sensitivity.
Cone-beam collimation has its best resolution near the collimator and its best sensitivity near the focal spot (i.e., far from the detector). Analogously, fan-beam has its best resolution near the collimator and its best sensitivity near the focal line. Fan beam collimation also offers the advantage of 2D complete-sampling using a circular orbit. However, the magnification is smaller, resulting in worse resolution. Although, single-pinhole collimation typically cannot offer 2D complete-sampling using a circular orbit, it has both its best resolution and sensitivity near the focal spot (aperture). Thus, single-pinhole is most advantageous when a small Radius of Rotation (ROR) may be achieved.
Thus, it is highly desirable to blend these techniques to create a collimator with more favorable characteristics for some imaging scenarios. In particular, it is highly desirable to develop a new collimator and collimation technique that combines the resolution and sensitivity properties of pinhole Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) imaging with the 2D complete-sampling properties of fan-beam collimation. Briefly, the possible advantages over single-pinhole SPECT for clinical use are: (i) increased sensitivity; (ii) improved complete-sampling properties; (iii) easier scan setup; and (iv) faster reconstruction times. The primary advantage over fan-beam is improved resolution and/or sensitivity.
Such an inventive collimator and collimation technique is herein referred to as a slit-slat collimator and a slit-slat collimation technique. When multiple slits are employed, such an inventive collimator and collimation technique is herein referred to as a multislit-slat collimator and a multislit-slat collimation technique
In one embodiment, provided herein is a slit-slat collimator including a collimator frame having a frusto-pyramidal housing disposed thereon, the frusto-pyramidal housing having a rectangular base, a rectangular top and open sides defined by a trapezoidal shape, wherein the housing provides lead shielding. The collimator may further include a plurality of axial septa. The collimator may further include a plurality of spacers. The collimator may further include a means for alignably stacking the axial septa and the spacers. The collimator may further include an adjustable aperture plate mounted on the rectangular top including at least one adjustable aperture members.
In one embodiment, provided herein is a slit-slat collimator including a collimator frame having a frusto-pyramidal housing disposed thereon, the frusto-pyramidal housing having a rectangular base, a rectangular top and open sides defined by a trapezoidal shape, wherein the housing provides lead shielding. The collimator may further include an aperture forming unit selected from the group consisting of a pair of symmetric aperture forming members, an axial septum or both. The collimator may further include a means for alignably stacking the aperture forming unit. The collimator may further include an adjustable aperture plate mounted on the rectangular top comprising at least one aperture forming unit.
In another embodiment provided here in is a method of collimating electromagnetic radiation including the steps of selecting a particular electromagnetic radiation for collimation, the radiation output from a specimen of interest. The method may further include positioning a detector of the particular radiation in a location useful for gathering information about the specimen and associated with the particular radiation. The method may further include using a slit-slat collimator including a collimator frame having a frusto-pyramidal housing disposed thereon, the frusto-pyramidal housing having a rectangular base, a rectangular top and open sides defined by a trapezoidal shape, wherein the housing provides lead shielding. The collimator may further include a plurality of axial septa. The collimator may further include a plurality of spacers. The collimator may further include a means for alignably stacking the axial septa and the spacers. The collimator may further include an adjustable aperture plate mounted on the rectangular top including at least one adjustable aperture members. The method may further include adjusting the aperture plate to adjust collimation aperture.
In another embodiment provided here in is an imaging system including an electromagnetic radiation point source. The imaging system may further include a detector panel having an array of detector elements disposed thereon. The imaging system may further include a slit-slat collimator including a collimator frame having a frusto-pyramidal housing disposed thereon, the frusto-pyramidal housing having a rectangular base, a rectangular top and open sides defined by a trapezoidal shape, wherein the housing provides lead shielding. The collimator may further include a plurality of axial septa. The collimator may further include a plurality of spacers. The collimator may further include a means for alignably stacking the axial septa and the spacers. The collimator may further include an adjustable aperture plate mounted on the rectangular top including at least one adjustable aperture members.
a shows a close-up of slats assembly (17 mm tall; 0.11 mm thick), which were separated by 1.27-mm-thick nylon.
b shows a slat assembly. The slat assembly was constructed from tungsten slats separated by nylon.
c shows a side view of tungsten slat assembly. The slats were 17 mm tall and 0.11 mm thick, and separated by either 1.27 or 2.54 mm of nylon. 1 or 2 stacks of slats were used to produce different slat heights (either 17 or 34 mm, respectively).
d shows a close-up of slit assembly, which was formed from two tungsten plates configured to form 90° acceptance angle and separated by either 2.03 mm (shown) or 4.06 mm.
e shows a view of slit assembly of
a shows Robotic stage was used to position point source above aperture slit (h=10-205 mm).
b shows a zoom of
c shows
a shows a calculation of the illuminated portion of the ith slat. Photon paths are projected on a plane normal to the x axis. Photons illuminate the first channel to the right of the z axis without intercepting the top of the slat. For this channel yi cannot be calculated with EQ. 24 and, thus, is not included in EQ. 24; rather it is handled separately from all other channels. Note that for the case illustrated, the channel associated to i=0 is the first to the left of the z axis because in it is projected the top of the slat with y coordinate 0 on the plane z=−(s+a); the channel i=1 is the second to the right of the z axis because in it is projected the top of the slat with y coordinate 1 (d+t).
b shows the definition of focal length for a diverging slat assembly.
a shows slit-slat sensitivity to a 57Co point source versus distance. The slit width is w. The slat height and spacing between slats are a and d, respectively.
b shows slit-slat transaxial resolution to a 57Co point source versus distance. The slit width is w. The slat height and spacing between slats are a and d, respectively.
c shows slit-slat axial resolution to a 57Co point source versus distance. The slit width is w. The slat height and spacing between slats are a and d, respectively.
a shows sensitivity averaged over disks as a function of disk diameter. The pinhole and slit-slat were reoptimized for each disk diameter.
b shows average resolutions as a function of disk diameter for configurations used in the plot in
c shows point source sensitivity as a function of distance from the collimator for the configuration that was optimal at a disk diameter of 20 cm.
a shows the transaxial field of view. In the transaxial directions, pinhole and slit-slat have the same FOV and fan-beam and cone-beam have the same FOV. The focal point for fan-beam and cone-beam is 65 cm from the detector, with a 53 cm FOV camera.
b shows the axial field of view. In the axial direction, slit-slat and fan-beam have the same FOV. The focal point for fan-beam and cone-beam is 65 cm from the detector, with a 53 cm FOV camera.
a shows a coronal view of digital disk phantom and reconstructions of simulated noise-less projections. Disks of a digital disk phantom (2.848 cm in diameter; 0.178 cm thick).
b shows a coronal view of digital disk phantom and reconstructions of simulated noise-less projections. Reconstruction of simulated projections for circular orbit with an ROR of 4.0 cm The circular-orbit reconstruction has significant axial blurring
c shows a coronal view of digital disk phantom and reconstructions of simulated noise-less projections. Reconstruction of simulated projections for helical orbit with an ROR of 3.0 cm and axial travel of 2.56 cm. The ROR is too small to give complete sampling with only one pinhole.
d shows a coronal view of digital disk phantom and reconstructions of simulated noise-less projections. Reconstruction of simulated projections for helical orbit with an ROR of 3.5 cm and axial travel of 2.56 cm. The helical-orbit reconstruction does not have significant axial blurring.
a shows a robotic stage aligned with the AOR.
b shows a laser aligned with the AOR. The linear stage is then aligned with the laser.
a shows comparison of reconstruction from simulated hot-rod projections with no shift. Pixel size was 0.2 cm. 250 iterations of MLEM were used.
b shows comparison of reconstruction from simulated hot-rod projections with 1.0 mm mechanical shift. Pixel size was 0.2 cm. 250 iterations of MLEM were used.
c shows comparison of reconstruction from simulated hot-rod projections with 1.0 mm electronic shift. Pixel size was 0.2 cm. 250 iterations of MLEM were used.
a shows experimental reconstructions of micro cold-rod phantom using iterative reconstruction modeling penetrative sensitivity and PSF. A transaxial slice is shown for mechanical shift correction in the correct direction. Rod diameters are about 1.2, 1.6, 2.4, 3.2, 4.0, and 4.8 mm.
b shows experimental reconstructions of micro cold-rod phantom using iterative reconstruction modeling penetrative sensitivity and PSF. A transaxial slice is shown for no mechanical shift correction. Rod diameters are about 1.2, 1.6, 2.4, 3.2, 4.0, and 4.8 mm.
c shows experimental reconstructions of micro cold-rod phantom using iterative reconstruction modeling penetrative sensitivity and PSF. A transaxial slice is shown for mechanical shift correction in the wrong direction. Rod diameters are about 1.2, 1.6, 2.4, 3.2, 4.0, and 4.8 mm.
a shows calculated axial mechanical shift versus gantry angle for one gamma camera (Head 3). Several different data sets are shown. A large discontinuity is evident at 240 deg., which is where this camera begins and ends its motion. Head 2 shows a similar magnitude for its variation. Head 1, which is more rigidly attached, shows about half the magnitude.
b shows resolution degradation (FWHM) versus mechanical shift for cold-rod phantom.
c shows resolution degradation (FWHM) versus electronic shift for cold-rod phantom.
a shows a potential aperture plate with a raised center slit, which will give reduced magnification for the side slits, so that they will not truncate. Solid plates can also form focused slits.
b shows a potential aperture plate with body-contouring plate; the side slits are elevated to get closer to the body. Solid plates can also form focused slits.
c shows a potential aperture plate with focused apertures with “T” pieces. Solid plates can also form focused slits.
a shows completely sampled region (hatched, unshaded) for cardiac scans from left posterior oblique to right anterior oblique using slit-slat. The path of slit-slat's focal point coincides with the path of the aperture. The completely sampled region is bounded by the path of the focal point and the line connecting the end points. The points P1 and P2 show that those points are either completely sampled (angle greater than 180 deg.) or incompletely sampled. Only the central slit is shown. The truncated region is shaded. Hatched and shaded indicates where complete sampling may be compromised by truncation.
b shows completely sampled region (hatched, unshaded) for cardiac scans from left posterior oblique to right anterior oblique using fan-beam. The fan-beam collimator follows the same orbit as slit-slat in
a shows a prototype collimator, in particular the collimator setup. A multi-pinhole collimator was used for shielding. The slit and slat assemblies were placed on this collimator. The stages positioned and rotated the phantom during the scan.
b shows a prototype collimator, in particular a close up of the collimator. A multi-pinhole collimator was used for shielding. The slit and slat assemblies were placed on this collimator. The stages positioned and rotated the phantom during the scan.
c shows a prototype collimator, in particular a top view with the phantom in place. A multi-pinhole collimator was used for shielding. The slit and slat assemblies were placed on this collimator.
a shows a calibration scan. Fit (straight line) of EQ. 79 to the centroids of the point-source projections.
a shows a calibration scan. Mechanical and electronic shifts as a function of the induced transverse shift of the AOR (i.e. Ax).
a shows a projection for w=3.0 mm. The phantom is a micro hot-rod.
b shows a projection for w=3.0 mm. The phantom is a micro cold-rod.
c shows a projection for w=3.0 mm. The phantom is a mini cold-rod.
d shows a reconstruction for w=3.0 mm. The phantom is a micro hot-rod.
e shows a reconstruction for w=3.0 mm. The phantom is a micro cold-rod.
f shows a reconstruction for w=3.0 mm. The phantom is a mini cold-rod.
a shows a projection for w=1.0 mm. This is a micro hot-rod phantom.
b shows a reconstruction for w=1.0 mm. This is a micro hot-rod phantom.
a shows a backprojection of point-source. Backprojection of centroids without compensating for mechanical and electronic shifts.
b shows a backprojection of point-source. Backprojection with compensation.
a shows a fillable cardiac insert phantom for use with the Data Spectrum torso phantom in
b shows a fillable breast insert phantom for use with the Data Spectrum torso phantom in
c shows a Data Spectrum torso phantom.
In one embodiment slit-slat collimation behaves like pinhole collimation in the transverse directions, but septa spaced axially are used to restrict incoming photons so that only in-plane photons are accepted.
Cone-beam collimation focuses to a point. This gives larger magnifications and sensitivity than fan-beam, but at the cost of axial field of view. By analogy, an embodiment of slit-slat collimation, when compared with single-pinhole, has a larger axial field of view and completely sampled data at the cost of axial magnification and reduced sensitivity in the central transverse plane. A possible disadvantage of an embodiment of slit-slat collimation is that axial resolution may be compromised, but this may be overcome with long axial septa.
In an embodiment of slit-slat collimation has its best resolution and sensitivity near the focal line. Thus, when a small radius of rotation (ROR) may be achieved, single-pinhole and slit-slat collimation offer improved resolution and sensitivity when compared with cone-beam and fan-beam collimation.
As compared to fan-beam and single-pinhole collimation, an embodiment of slit-slat collimation offers (i) due to the similar magnification geometry, high resolution in transverse planes; (ii) as for a pinhole, high sensitivity at points close to the slit; and (iii) when the slats are parallel, extended axial field of view as for a fan-beam collimator, which also has the advantage of complete sampling, but comes at the price of a loss in axial resolution. This loss is due to the lack of axial magnification and the distance from the detector necessary to achieve high magnification in the transverse direction. Literature approaches for recovering axial resolution have been proposed and involve shifting axially the imager by half a slat pitch and applying resolution recovery techniques during reconstruction.
In many ways, an embodiment of slit-slat collimation is similar to fan-beam with a short focal length. However, there are substantial difficulties with fabricating fan-beams and cone-beams with short focal lengths, despite potentially large gains in brain imaging. For both foil collimators and cast collimators, the hole lengths at the edge become too long, which result in manufacturing problems that are very formidable to overcome. For example, if one uses pins to cast a collimator, the standard pins that are used for clinical collimators are not long enough to span the distance between the photo-etched plates that are used to support and locate the pins. Also, with casting methods the angle and length of the pins may make them susceptible to bending/breaking due to the forces from the lead's contraction. Thus, hole angulation may be compromised. For short focal length foil collimators, the specialized molds that are required are very difficult and expensive to make. There may also be a large variation in the septal thicknesses between the front and back of the hole. The lead foil must be markedly distorted in order to maintain parallel collimation in the axial direction while simultaneously being highly convergent in the transaxial direction. Again, accurate hole angulation may be difficult to achieve.
The following sub-sections describe how slit-slat collimation may be used as the appropriate collimation for any imaging scenario, taking advantage of slit-slat's high sensitivity and good resolution for small ROR.
The data shows that an embodiment of multislit-slat offers higher sensitivity for the same resolution for cardiac scans compared with both parallel-beam and fan-beam. In one embodiment, cardiac imaging is performed with truncated projection data, but the cardiac region is completely sampled. Since the heart is displaced from the center of the body, in such an embodiment multislit-slat can get near the heart for a typical left posterior oblique (LPO) to right anterior oblique (RAO) (i.e., a 180 degree) scan. In addition to the sensitivity advantage, in such an embodiment, multislit-slat has an advantage in sampling completeness over fan-beam since LPO to RAO completely samples the cardiac region for slit-slat, but not for fan-beam. Since just over half of all nuclear medicine scans are cardiac (8.0 million of 15.8 million in 2004; Society of Nuclear Medicine), improvements in cardiac imaging could have a large clinical impact.
The data shows that an embodiment of slit-slat offers higher sensitivity and/or resolution than fan-beam for objects up to about 27 cm in diameter. In addition, in many ways, one embodiment of slit-slat imaging has similarities to a short focal length fan-beam or cone-beam, shown in simulation to make a large improvement in brain imaging, but without the aforementioned fabrication difficulties.
An embodiment of slit-slat collimation may be a good choice for imaging prone patients with a general-purpose SPECT scanner, where the long axis of the patient is parallel with the scanner's axis of rotation (AOR). The breast may be centered on the AOR so that a small radius of rotation may be achieved. In such an embodiment, complete sampling or nearly complete sampling may be achieved with a partial circular orbit for one gamma camera, roughly from the sternum to the axilla. In such an embodiment, sensitivity and/or resolution is improved compared to fan-beam and parallel-beam collimation since a small ROR may be achieved. In another embodiment, the slit-slat collimator may be complemented with a fan-beam collimator on a different camera head in order to improve sampling and sensitivity; this second head would rotate behind the patient.
In another embodiment, limbs are imaged for sarcoma, osteomyelitis, and stress fractures. In such an embodiment very small RORs may be achieved.
Pediatric imaging covers a large range of patient sizes from newborns to young adults. For many imaging situations, the patients are very young and in one embodiment a small ROR may be achieved. In these scenarios, an embodiment of slit-slat collimation is likely to be a better choice than fan-beam or parallel-beam. Two common pediatric scans are ictal/interictal epilepsy and renal DMSA, both of which are cold-spot imaging, which particularly benefits from no multiplexing.
An embodiment of slit-slat is likely to be a good choice for mid-size animals such as rabbits and baboons. Such an embodiment may also be a good choice for whole-body small-animal imaging.
Complete sampling is a critical criterion for SPECT. It is a basic premise of this application that quantitative SPECT requires artifact-free reconstructions, which may be obtained only if the volume is completely sampled. SPECT is based on sampling line integrals of activity concentration through a three-dimensional object. The line integrals have the effect of projecting a three-dimensional (x,y,z) object onto a two-dimensional (bin,slice) detector. By measuring the line integrals from several different vantage angles, the third dimension may be recovered, if the object is completely sampled.
Necessary and sufficient conditions for reconstruction from projection sampling have been developed by S. S. Orlov (Theory of three dimensional reconstruction. I. Conditions for a complete set of projections. Soviet Physics Crystallography, 1975. 20(3): p. 312-314) for electron microscopy and by both H. Tuy and B. Smith for cone-beam SPECT (An inversion formula for cone-beam reconstruction. SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics, 1983. 43(3): p. 546-552 and Image reconstruction from cone beam projections: Necessary and sufficient conditions and reconstruction methods. IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 1985. MI-4(1); p. 14-25). Orlov's condition requires that the entire completely sampled volume be seen by the same set of view angles (e.g., untruncated, parallel-beam collimation). As part of the work in understanding sampling issues, it has been recently shown that these two geometric conditions are related allowing Tuy's condition to be re-written in the language of Orlov (see Metzler, S. D., J. E. Bowsher and R. J. Jaszczak: Geometrical similarities of the Orlov and Tuy sampling criteria and a numerical algorithm for assessing sampling completeness. IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science, 2003. 50(5): p. 1550-1555).
Tuy's condition indicates that a circular orbit of a single-pinhole aperture completely samples only the plane of the aperture. Incomplete sampling leads to artifacts in reconstruction. Orlov's and Tuy's sampling criteria apply to 3D imaging scenarios in which arbitrary orbits are used. The criterion is much simpler in the case of the slit-slat collimator where each axial slice can be thought of as essentially independent (from a sampling point of view, although the point-spread function may span several axial slices due to resolution). For the proposed collimation with untruncated projections, all points (from all imaged slices) that remain in the field of view for a circular scan (i.e., the common volume [75]) are completely sampled. Truncated projections can lead to complete projection data within a region of interest, even if the whole body is not completely sampled. This is particularly relevant to reconstruction of cardiac scans
Helical orbits have been used (R21/33-EB-1543) as one method to address the sampling completeness issues in pinhole SPECT. It has been found that this has worked well for small animals since it allows complete sampling while obtaining good resolution and sensitivity because of a small ROR. Although this works well in a laboratory setting for small animals, there may be some difficulties in translating this work to human imaging. First, the existing system uses an external robotic stage to translate the mouse precisely along the axis of rotation. SPECT scanner beds, even for those capable of translation during a scan, are not aligned as well (they are typically “eye-balled”). Second, the system requires greater user intervention in choosing the appropriate helical parameters (e.g., starting position, stage speed/pitch, etc). Third, the reconstruction takes a significant amount of time due to thorough modeling of the point-spread function and the inherent 3D inversion problem (the system cannot be considered as several 2D problems, because of substantial mixing of axial slices). Although these issues are acceptable—and preferable in some cases for small animals (e.g., using a single pinhole gives very good resolution and the stage allows careful positioning)—they make direct translation of helical pinhole SPECT as a common clinical modality difficult. On the other hand, slit-slat imaging does not require axial translation during the scan and allows the reconstruction to be factored into multiple nearly-2D problems (with some overlap due to resolution).
An embodiment of slit-slat collimation is not intended to be a dedicated system, unlike SPRINT, HEADTOME, Linoview, MarC-SPECT, and CardiAre. Instead, an embodiment of slit-slat uses replaceable collimation on a general-purpose clinical scanner, unlike the six systems. Since an embodiment of a slit-slat collimator is mounted on radially adjustable heads, the ROR of the system can be adjusted to specific imaging scenarios, unlike SPRINT, HEADTOME, and the GE system; MarC-SPECT and CardiArc have some, but limited, adjustability since the path of the slits is fixed relative to the scanner, but the position of the patient has some flexibility. In comparison with SPRINT, MarC-SPECT, CardiArc, and the GE system, the choice of collimation mounted on rotating instead of stationary detectors has the potential advantage of having multiple collimation in one embodiment such as an embodiment of slit-slat combined with fan-beam and/or single pinhole. In comparison with Linoview and the GE system, in one embodiment it is intended for mid-size to large objects, whereas those systems are intended for small animals.
Comparison with Multi-Pinhole SPECT
Several groups are developing multi-pinhole SPECT. Multi-pinhole aperture plates are typically constructed by fabricating several single pinholes as a group. The choice of size and position can potentially lead to improved performance. The additional pinholes give improved overall sensitivity and provide views of different parts of the object. In the above cases, all of which are oriented at small-animal imaging exclusively, projections of the object mix axial slices leading to fully 3D reconstructions.
One embodiment of the slit-slat collimator proposed is, in some sense, a specific type of multi-pinhole collimation where the pinholes are aligned axially (i.e., in the direction of the axis of rotation (AOR)). However, pinhole projections are separated by axial septa to create nearly independent axial slices (as one has for fan-beam collimation). With this pinhole arrangement combined with axial septa, which prevent multiplexing, the complete-sampling properties are emphasized to improve reconstruction performance and usability for clinical settings and some animal-imaging scenarios. An embodiment of the slit-slat collimator, although useful for small-animal imaging, is oriented towards larger objects, especially human imaging. In addition, the use of axial septa makes the imaging scenario 2D (except for overlap due to detector and septa resolution), which makes the reconstruction problem simpler and faster since only nearby axial slices need to be considered. Lastly, in one embodiment slit-slat's septa prevent multiplexing, which is common in multi-pinhole imaging; thus, slit-slat may be used in planar studies.
Like all nuclear medicine imaging techniques (including planar conjugate counting), SPECT quantification is influenced by several factors. The most important factors that limit 3D quantification include: 1) scatter and non-uniform attenuation; 2) geometric collimator/camera response; 3) object size and motion; 4) statistical uncertainties resulting from low count density studies; 5) accurate mechanical and electronic alignment; 6) complete sampling; and 7) characteristics of the reconstruction algorithm. By carefully understanding and accounting for the major factors, SPECT is useful in determining volumes, uptake ratios, concentrations, and total activities. Many investigators, including us, believe the physical characteristics of the SPECT acquisition process must be carefully modeled and effectively incorporated into the reconstruction algorithm.
The following quantification factors are addressed: (2) geometric collimator/camera response; (5) accurate mechanical and electronic alignment; and (6) complete sampling. The other four issues previously mentioned are addressed briefly below.
Developing attenuation and scatter compensation techniques is not an aim of this research. However, it is a requirement, in some circumstances, to have attenuation and scatter compensation in order to achieve quantitatively accurate reconstructions. Scatter and attenuation is discussed further below.
This imaging technique is applicable to both human (adult and pediatric) down to small-animal imaging, where the emphasis is on translating what was learned from helical pinhole imaging of small animals (R33-EB-1543) to a technique that is applicable to larger animals (e.g., rabbits, monkeys and sheep) and humans. In one embodiment, slit-slat imaging is most appropriate when a circular orbit with a small radius of rotation may be achieved (e.g., brain, breast, limb, pediatric, and animal), or when the collimator remains close to the region of interest for a partial orbit, such as cardiac.
Both humans and animals may move during data acquisition. These movements may be periodic (e.g., breathing, heart motion) or they may be non-periodic (e.g., limb movement, sagging). Gating can be used to compensate for periodic motion. In addition, four dimensional (4D) techniques are being developed to compensate for non-periodic motion. The problem of motion is beyond the scope of this application. Statically positioned phantoms are used instead. The size of the phantoms matches the intended human imaging targets. In the longer term, this technique may aid dynamic imaging studies since it has higher sensitivity and can offer several complete sets of data per revolution.
Statistical uncertainties may be reduced by (1) increasing the available photon counts by increasing the overall sensitivity and by using long scan times; and (2) using iterative algorithms that incorporate statistical uncertainties. Working versions of this code exist already. An additional consideration is the setup of the scan to increase sensitivity. For example, embodiments of slit-slat collimators have high sensitivity when the object-to-aperture distance is small. Thus, as small an ROR as is reasonably achievable is used.
In one embodiment, iterative reconstruction is used. There are several reasons for using iterative techniques for this project: (1) accurate modeling of the collimator response; (2) accurate modeling of the detector response; (3) accurate modeling of statistical processes; (4) ready inclusion of attenuation compensation; and (5) greater flexibility in scatter-compensation techniques.
In one embodiment, slit-slat collimation is largely independent of isotope. Tc-99m is used primarily because of its availability and cost effectiveness. It is also a common isotope for clinical studies. In addition, I-123 and I-131 may be used on occasion, which are also used in clinical studies because of the relatively easy process of labeling molecules with iodine. These three isotopes have different primary energies and different half lives. The difference in photon energy affects three different parameters in the kernel modeling: aperture penetration, detector depth-of-interaction effect, and detector resolution. Each of these effects are modeled with its own energy-dependent parameter. The different half lives are easily compensated in reconstruction.
In one embodiment, the collimator frame (
The design of the focal length considers the following: (i) detector dimensions; (ii) largest field of view desired; (iii) aperture diameter, which determines geometric resolution; (iv) magnification; (v) parallax (depth of interaction effect) and (vi) detector intrinsic resolution which is a component in the object-plane resolution. Optimizations suggest that a likely focal length for this collimator is about 7-12 cm so that it may be used for several different scenarios. As the focal length gets smaller, the field of view gets larger since the magnification is reduced, assuming that the acceptance angle is adjusted (increased) simultaneously; a larger acceptance angle increases the effect of parallax, but reduces the ROR required to avoid truncation. In addition, a shorter focal length combined with a large detector, such as that of the Siemens Symbia T, allows the use of multiple slits, which increase sensitivity. A further advantage is that shorter septa yield the same axial resolution because the detector is closer to the patient. On the other hand, larger magnification helps overcome the effect of intrinsic detector resolution in the transaxial direction.
A mechanism has been developed to mount replaceable axial septa. By using replaceable septa, experiments may be performed to test pitch, thickness, and height, in addition to testing predictions without septa. The mechanism provides enough strength to limit shifting and twisting during scans.
In one embodiment, axial septa are used in conjunction with an aperture plate to provide axial and transaxial collimation, respectively. The septa limit overlap from one slice to the next. Anger's geometric resolution formula, applied in the axial direction, gives an estimate of resolution. The formula is:
R
g
=d(a+b+c)/ae (EQ. 1)
where d is the distance between slats, a is the slat height, ae is the effective slat height considering penetration, b is the distance from the top of the slats to the object, and c is the distance from the detector to the slats. From
where w is the slit width, h is the distance from the point to the slit, and t is the slat thickness. Since the first and second terms are fixed for a given point in space and resolution, sensitivity is maximized by maximizing the term d/(d+t), which can be interpreted as the open fraction of slats (i.e., the gap between slats divided by the period of the slats). The largest sensitivity for fixed t is obtained by maximizing d. To maintain resolution, a is scaled proportionally (i.e., d/a is fixed). Thus, the current understanding is that maximum sensitivity for a given resolution is achieved by using tall slats, which is limited by the focal length of the aperture slit, with a relatively large gap between them. All parameter choices may be validated through simulation.
In one embodiment, the aperture, plates mount to the top, of the collimator frame. By having a replaceable plate, different geometric configurations may be studied. For example, it is possible to have plates of fixed or variable geometric parameters. In addition, it is possible to have plates that have the central slit in the same plane as the side slits and a different plate that has offset planes. It is economical to have several plates fabricated since no other part of the collimator needs to be adjusted.
In another embodiment, the aperture plate will contain the pinholes aligned axially, termed “multi-pinhole” aperture plate (
In another embodiment, the aperture plate will contain an axial slit (
A design has been developed that considers the concepts discussed above. In one embodiment, a collimator frame, similar to that in
In one embodiment, the axial septa are stacked on support rods (
In one embodiment, the prototype aperture plate uses interchangeable and adjustable lead or tungsten “T” pieces (
In one embodiment for the septa, tungsten is used. In one embodiment, the aperture “T” pieces are made of lead; tungsten may be used for the knife-edge aperture pieces to improve durability and attenuation. In one embodiment, the frame is also made of lead. In one embodiment, the collimator's mass is roughly 50 kg for the Prism 3000 XP and 75 kg for the Siemens scanner, both of which are well less than the maximum weights of other collimators for these scanners.
In another embodiment, the axial septa have a trapezoidal shape (
In another embodiment, the use of interchangeable pieces provides a great deal of flexibility in configuration. For example, it is possible to make the repeated unit two septa followed by two apertures. In other words, make the septa twice as thick and the aperture twice as long as the basic one-and-one configuration. It is also be possible to make the unit two aperture pieces and one septum. That would result in an aperture that is twice as long, but the septa would be the same as compared to the basic unit. Another configuration of interest would be to stack many aperture pieces together without the septa. That would result in an axial slit as in
In another embodiment, a further consideration in designing these interchangeable pieces is to have an adjustable aperture. That can be accomplished by having a suitable set of holes drilled in the aperture and septa pieces.
In another embodiment, one weakness in designing the above pieces is that small axial gaps may exist between pieces. Methods are considered to alleviate this potential problem. For example, one could fabricate the pieces so that there is an axial step (i.e., a labyrinth) somewhere in each piece. However, this could greatly add to the difficulty of construction. On the other hand, one could design a top or bottom cover to reduce this problem, if it exists. Another possibility would be to split the pieces so that there is a top and a bottom. One could then offset the tops and bottoms by half of a piece thickness to remove the gap. This last solution would double the number of pieces, but each would be straightforward to make.
In one embodiment, the radius of rotation of the collimator may be adjusted to fill the central section of the detector without truncating the object (
Accurate models of the sensitivity and PSF are important for good resolution and quantification in the reconstruction. To develop accurate models of the geometric and penetrative components of sensitivity and the PSF, analytic calculations are used, based on the calculated path length of a photon through attenuating material: ΔL. Numerical models are also developed. Lastly, experimental results are an important validation of the analytical and numerical models.
An analytic form is determined for sensitivity and PSF when an axial slit, complemented by axial septa, is used for collimation; this geometry is equivalent to the Design, which uses interchangeable pieces. ΔL of the aperture is determined. From this, the sensitivity and PSF is determined analytically. The accuracy of this model can be tested through numerical and experimental methods. For the experimental methods, the axial septa are removed to test the slit component of the sensitivity and PSF. The effect of axial septa on sensitivity and PSF is then included by applying techniques developed in the above section.
Analytic geometry methods are used to determine ΔL, as was done for the calculation of ΔL for single-pinhole collimation. Cylindrical coordinates are used to match the symmetry of the problem. The calculation of sensitivity due to penetration in Metzler, S. D., J. E. Bowsher, K. L. Greer and R. J. Jaszczak (Analytic determination of the pinhole collimator's point-spread function and RMS resolution with penetration. IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 2002. 21(8): p. 878-887) for a point source a perpendicular distance h from the aperture plane was:
where θ is the incidence angle of the photon (see Metzler et al. “Pinhole collimator's point-spread function” for more details), μ is the linear attenuation coefficient, and d is the diameter of the aperture. The integral over β and ρ are for the polar coordinates of the photon's intersection with the aperture plane. The trigonometric term sin3θ can be replaced using rectangular coordinates x and z for the position of the point source relative to the aperture. Note that the distance in the y direction is h. Then, EQ. 3 can be written as:
Since the point source is always in the axial plane of the aperture (i.e., z=0), it is likely that the initial calculation is:
where the integral over z represents the axial septa, scaled to the aperture plane, and the integral over x is in the transverse direction. Due to the symmetry about the x axis, only the positive branch is integrated and the term in front has been multiplied by a factor of 2.
Once the appropriate form for ΔL has been determined, the PSF is given by EQ. 73 for the case of untilted (unfocused) slits. The appropriate modifications are made for the focused case, as has been done for focused pinholes.
In one embodiment, the axial septa reduces sensitivity (compared with the case of an axial slit in the same locations without septa) at the same time that they limit the photons' axial spread. However, it is hypothesized that this is a worthwhile tradeoff since the information quality of each photon increases (i.e., the axial slice of origin is known better). By counter example, if the only goal were to detect as many photons as possible, collimators would not be used in SPECT. The reason the information contained in each photon improves is that axial overlap is greatly reduced.
The impact of the septa depends on the detailed design. However,
The effect of the septa is analytically and numerically modeled, including the penetrative term, on the sensitivity and PSF, so that the prototype is designed with sufficient flexibility to increase the septal height (a in
Based on the total ΔL (i.e., aperture and axial septa), the appropriate formulas for the resolution- and sensitivity-effective diameters are calculated following the procedures outlined in Accorsi, R. and S. D. Metzler: (Analytic determination of the resolution-equivalent effective diameter of a pinhole collimator. IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 2004. 23(6): p. 750-763). In summary, when the path lengths of photons through attenuating material give attenuation factors of k, the PSF is reduced to k times its maximum: e−μΔL=k. For example, if k=0.5, the half maximum is determined, leading to the calculation of full width at half maximum. Hence, the resolution-effective diameter that gives the full width at half maximum of the PSF may be calculated.
The data shows that there are two directions of interest for single-pinhole. These directions were along the tilt axis (i.e., the axis used to measure θ) and the axis in the aperture plane perpendicular to this axis. This bifurcation leads to a non-isotropic PSF (i.e., it is not circular even though the aperture is circular). It is expected in this slit-slat case that there are also two directions of interest: axial and transaxial (
It is expected that the calculation of the effective diameters yields insight to the collimation properties of the aperture and septa. This is useful for designing appropriate configurations.
Ray-tracing methods are used to calculate the sensitivity and PSF numerically. Geometry-modeling software has been developed. A specific model for the slit-slat aperture, including axial septa has been developed. This model is used to determine the attenuation path length so that the appropriate weighting factor may be applied to each simulated photon. This is how the sensitivity and PSF for single-pinhole collimation were calculated.
These numerical results are an important cross-check for validating the analytic formulas. Further, it is possible to turn on and off features of the model (e.g., axial septa) to determine their effects on the calculations. Additionally, a geometry model has been recently developed for slit-slat in the framework of the GEANT4 simulation package.
Comparison with Experimental Results
Experimental results are an important validation tool. The sensitivity and PSF are measured as described below. In addition, the measurements are repeated without the axial septa in place as further validation of the numerical model, where septa can be turned off, and the first-pass analytic model described above. In addition, different size aperture slits and different photon energies (i.e., isotopes) are used in order to measure the dependence on the geometrical as well as the penetrative parameters.
Maximum-Likelihood Estimation-Maximization (MLEM) with Appropriate Choice of Probability Weights
The mathematical formalism of iterative statistical reconstruction represents the orbits and collimator/camera configurations through a system of linear equations:
where Mi is the expected number of photons detected at projection bin i, λj is the expected number of photons emitted from voxel j, Pij is the probability that a photon emitted from voxel j is detected at bin i, and bi is the expected number of background photons detected at bin i from processes not modeled in Pij, such as scatter. Noise in the projection data is well described as Poisson, so a log-likelihood function is defined as:
where yi is the measured number of photons detected at bin i. One of the iterative statistical reconstruction methods utilized is the widely employed ordered subsets expectation maximization (OSEM) algorithm, which updates the image to increase l({right arrow over (λ)}) on each iteration (an increase is not guaranteed but almost always results in practice), and which is typically run for several iterations until an acceptable trade-off is obtained between noise and resolution.
Iterative pinhole reconstruction software has already been developed. The software uses “kernels” to model the point-response (including aperture penetration, detector parallax, and detector resolution) and sensitivity. For each reconstruction voxel, the response of each detector bin near the expected center of a voxel's projection is pre-calculated according to the models and formulas described above. In addition, parallax and Gaussian resolution are numerically convolved. Further, the software allows for any generic orbit to be used and for joint reconstruction of multiple collimator types. This existing reconstruction software is the basis (i.e., starting point) for the new slit-slat reconstruction program described below.
The effect of attenuation is small when using micro phantoms. This is true with pinhole imaging, where compensation in reconstruction is not used. The effects are larger when scanning larger phantoms, and must be compensated for accurate quantification. The inherently co-registered CT image from the Symbia T SPECT/CT scanner is used for attenuation map.
Since the photons must go through the slit, which is a focal line, the natural choice for transmission would be a sheet source. To reduce scatter and dose, the sheet would be collimated with a fan-beam collimator whose focal-length matched the distance to the slit (
OSEM iterative reconstruction can incorporate attenuation compensation within its framework. The algorithm requires knowledge of Pij, which is the probability that a photon emitted from voxel j is detected at bin i. The current reconstruction code does not consider attenuation compensation; Pij, currently considers only collinator and detector effects—geometric and penetrative sensitivity, detector parallax, and detector resolution. Attenuation reduces the expected number of photons from voxel j detected at bin i by a known quantity, e−∫μ{right arrow over (dl
P
ij
Total
=P
ij
Geometric
·e
−∫μ{right arrow over (dl
Because PijGeometric is determined by the pinhole kernel program and ∫μ{right arrow over (dlij)} can be determined by the attenuation map, PijTotal can be calculated and used to produce attenuation-corrected reconstructions.
There are many techniques in the literature for scatter compensation. Jaszczak et al. have reconstructed a secondary energy window as an estimate of the background. The dual window method is used to estimate the scatter contribution to the projection data.
Three types of calibrations need to be performed: mechanical shifts, electronic shifts, and ROR measurements.
Measuring Mechanical and Electronic Shifts with a Point Source
In the data, a point-source method is described for measuring the mechanical and electronic shifts based on the expected centroid of EQ. 75. This equation was used in a maximum-likelihood fit to determine the parameters for single-pinhole imaging. There are two modifications that need to be made for slit-slat imaging: (1) the transverse (x) and the axial (z) components are no longer fit simultaneously; and (2) the mechanical shift should now be parameterized as a line instead of a point since it may change with z. For single pinhole imaging, both the transverse and axial components depend on the aperture and point-source locations. For slit-slat imaging, the axial slices are independent. Thus, only the transverse component is fit:
τx is also parameterized as a linear function of z: τx(z)=zτx,m+τx,b, where the m and b subscripts indicate slope and intercept, respectively. It is unlikely that εx needs to be parameterized as a function of z. Further, a single point source to calibrate the system can no longer be used. However, a line source, aligned approximately with the AOR, should work well. Then, the source distribution can be parameterized with respect to z as a line: (x0(z),y0(z)). Thus, the final equation to fit is:
where the constants τx, εx, x0, y0 and ROR have all been replaced with linear functions of z. The measurement of ROR(z) is described below.
ROR Measurements with a Laser
ROR measurements are conducted using the methods above. The collimator is designed to allow for easy mounting of the laser target at different axial slices. Measurements are conducted at several axial slices (three is an appropriate number). Because of the rigid-body nature of the collimator, these three axial measurements fall along the same line (for each gantry angle). That is, the angular dependent ROR is measured for three different axial positions. At each angle, the value of the ROR is known at three different axial positions.
It is possible that there are angular-dependent tilts and/or axial shifts for this collimation. A symptom of this problem would be that at one axial end (e.g., the front) the ROR would be larger than at the other axial end for a range of angles, but smaller for a different range of gantry angles. The problem has already been discovered and compensated for with single-pinhole imaging and a dramatic improvement in resolution has been found. The same effect is seen in parallel-beam.
This problem would cause additional mixing of axial slices in projections (i.e., in addition to detector blurring). Appropriate compensations are then made in the reconstruction software. At the time of design, the software handles such cases. A reasonable method for compensating in software assumes that the reconstruction process simultaneously considers several neighboring slices.
Reconstruction with Truncated Projection Data
There has been recent progress in reconstructing truncated projection data to accurately determine 2D distributions within a region of interest (ROI). In one embodiment, slit-slat collimation is a 2D device in that each axial slice can be reconstructed separately. There are three factors that determine whether there is a unique solution for reconstructing truncated projection data: (i) the ROI must remain in the common field of view (FOV) during the scan; (ii) the FOV must extend to outside the body where the activity concentration (attenuation for CT) is zero; and (iii) each point within the FOV must meet the 2D sampling criteria of having all lines through each point measured. It has been shown that iterative algorithms yield good reconstructions even when there is some (i.e., small) violation of these three criteria.
In one embodiment, there are two advantages in cardiac imaging for multislit-slat collimation over fan-beam collimation. First, when considering truncated projections, fan-beam's radius of rotation (ROR) is limited by the body contour, not truncation on the side nearest the detector; it cannot get closer to the body. Thus, it cannot benefit from loosening the “cannot-truncate” constraint. In fact, truncation potentially worsens for fan-beam on the far-side of the object as the ROR increases. On the other hand, in one embodiment slit-slat's ROR can decrease so that it is limited by the body contour, instead of the need to avoid truncation; this improves both resolution and sensitivity. For example, when imaging the disk of diameter D above without truncation, the ROR was D csc(α/2)/2, where α was the slit's acceptance angle. With truncated projections, the ROR would be D/2 plus some small margin for clearance (˜1 cm). Second, since in one embodiment the focal point of slit-slat coincides with the aperture, one can see in
In evaluations using cardiac phantoms, truncated projection data are used to reconstruct the cardiac region. Orbits that completely sample the cardiac region are determined and necessary changes to the reconstruction software to accommodate the truncated data are then made. A similar advantage in breast imaging is foreseen since an orbit from the sternum to the axilla would completely sample the breast.
A filtered backprojection (FBP) algorithm is developed to complement the iterative algorithm. The reason for this orthogonal program is comparison and debugging.
Sensitivity Measurement with Point Source
In one embodiment, a point-source mounted on a set of three orthogonal positioning stages is used, as in
A “setup” study is performed to determine the relationship between these two coordinate systems. This relationship can be defined by three Euler angles and three offsets, one per dimension. These parameters are determined by changing the values of s x and s y to cover a 2D grid. For each position, the centroid of the projection onto the detector is determined. An additional parameter is used to account for the difference between the aperture's position and the electronic readout. The expected centroid of the projection onto the detector is:
where i indicates a particular measurement from the data set, F is the focal length of the collimator, and Ex is the electronic offset. This expected value is numerically corrected for parallax and used in a least-squares fit. The fit yields the six parameters (i.e., Euler angles and offsets) that define the relationship between the stages and the aperture. These parameters are inverted so that the stage set positions can be determined for a desired point-source location.
The sensitivity is measured at various angles and distances from the aperture to validate the analytic and numerical models. In addition, the sensitivity is measured at several different axial positions to verify that the sensitivity is independent of axial position. The axial stepping is performed on two different scales: large and small with respect to the axial septa. For example, for the large-scale experiment the point is placed axially about one quarter from each edge of the detector (two positions) and approximately in the middle, for a total of three positions. For the small scale, steps are taken using a robotic stage aligned with the axis of rotation about three slices (i.e., three times the spacing of the septa), in increments of about 0.1 slice. This is automated by programming the scanner and the stage.
PSF Measurement with Point Source
The PSF is measured using the same experimental setup as described for the sensitivity measurements (above). In fact, the measurements are performed simultaneously, since the sensitivity is the 2D integral of the point-spread function. Thus, the projection data are measured at different angles and distances from the aperture, as above. These experimental PSF results have been compared with the theoretical predictions. There are two useful directions: axial and transaxial. The axial resolution, due to the use of the axial septa, is comparable to parallel-beam and fan-beam with similar axial geometries. The transaxial resolution depends in detail on the geometry of the aperture plate.
Evaluation of Reconstruction Resolution with Disk and Rod Phantoms
Disk phantoms are used (as in
For a three-dimensional binned (voxelized) function, whose value at voxel position (i,j,k) is Vijk, the average least squared difference
where the sum is over all N combinations of ijk elements and the expected value of Vijk is Vijk.
In order to evaluate
A scale factor k is used to normalize the least squared difference:
This is minimized with respect to k for each translation and rotation of the digital phantom with respect to the reconstruction. The value of k is given as:
For each translation and rotation, the digital phantom is rebinned so that its new bin size is the same as the bin size of the reconstruction; this rebinning is accomplished by summing the smaller bins of the digital phantom.
Evaluation of Lesion-Contrast Estimation with Anthropomorphic Phantoms
In one embodiment, the most promising clinical applications for multislit-slat collimation are cardiac, brain, and breast imaging. The reason for this is that a small radius of rotation (<˜15 cm) may be obtained. For cardiac, the radius is slightly larger and over a 180 deg. scan; for the digital phantom of above with a torso width of 40 cm, a body-contour orbit ranges in ROR from 14-19 cm from the axis of rotation.
For cardiac imaging, both the Data Spectrum torso phantom with a cardiac insert (
As a general measure of lesion characterization, contrast is measured, defined as c=(l−b)/b, where l and b are radiopharmaceutical concentrations in the region of interest and the background, respectively. As is standard practice, l is determined as the activity per unit volume in a region of interest (ROT) that is centered within and somewhat smaller than the hot/cold lesion, so as to limit overlap of the ROI with blurring near the lesion's edge (i.e., partial volume effects). For sufficiently small lesions, blurring extends almost to the center of the structure and overlap cannot be avoided, causing l on average to underestimate (overestimate) for hot (cold) lesions the true structure concentration lT and thus c to underestimate (overestimate) the true contrast cT. This bias in l can be reduced by choosing a smaller ROI, but generally at the cost of greater random fluctuations in l and thus in c. The background concentration b is determined as the activity per unit volume in a second ROI positioned near but sufficiently outside the lesion ROI.
As just alluded to, the error in estimated contrast has bias and noise components, where biasc=
For a given experimental configuration (e.g., slit-slat-only or fan-beam-only), different pairs (biasc, noisec) can be obtained by varying many factors including lesion:background uptake ratio (cT), lesion-structure size, lesion-structure ROI size, and number of iterations for OSEM. Plotting bias versus noise then provides one or more curves for each configuration. For example, by changing the lesion's true contrast, one can compare the bias-vs-noise curve of slit-slat and fan-beam.
The quantities <c> and Var [c] can be estimated in several ways. Ensemble experimental studies are conducted to determine the mean and variance. Ensembles with lesion present and lesion absent are conducted as a comparative method for estimating background fluctuation. These studies are conducted for fan-beam-only, slit-slat-only, and mixed collimation. In addition, they are conducted with lesions of different sizes. Lastly, variation of aperture size and septal spacing are considered, but it is likely that this is first optimized with Monte Carlo to limit the number of configurations; for the brain-phantom studies it is also likely for these experimental evaluations that the different aperture sizes are acquired by using a different size on each of the three collimators. Acquisitions may be done with several different collimator types simultaneously (e.g., slit-slat, single-pinhole, and fan-beam) so that a direct comparison may be made and also that data may be combined in a joint reconstruction. Since each head separately acquires complete data (except for single-pinhole), this reduces the number of times the phantom needs to be repositioned.
Projection data is acquired separately for each lesion without background activity. The phantom is filled with water so there is a scattering and attenuating medium. After the lesion acquisition, the lesion is removed and the phantom is filled with background activity. The phantom is then be carefully repositioned. This can be done with laser markers. (For cold lesions, the previously mentioned background scan would be conducted in addition to a scan with the phantom filled with background activity and a cold lesion positioned to displace that activity.) This technique has several potential advantages. First, there is no issue with the lesion wall since when taking hot-lesion data the wall is scattering material, just like the rest of the water-filled phantom. On the other hand, when the hot lesion is removed for the background scans, the wall is also removed. Second, the signal to background (contrast) can be adjusted in post-processing by adding different combinations of scans together; since acquisition is a linear process, this technique is legitimate. It is also be possible to continuously vary the contrast by using re-sampling techniques that retain the Poisson nature of the data.
A limitation of the analysis may be that it does not consider the uncertainty in determining the boundaries of small lesion structures. At least in some cases, such uncertainty has been shown to increase the importance of resolution over sensitivity in the collimation/orbital configuration. In addition, by acquiring lesion-only data as described above, it may be possible to better determine the lesion's position.
New experimental and simulated data confirming the previous hypotheses (i.e., on-axis sensitivity of slit-slat is the geometric mean of pinhole and parallel-beam; transaxial and axial resolutions are well predicted by the pinhole and parallel-beam resolution formulas, respectively) have recently been published in the Journal of Nuclear Medicine. The mathematical derivation of these results follows.
A simple picture of slit-slat collimation is as the combination of pinhole collimation within transaxial planes separated by septa providing collimation in 1D (the slats). The sensitivity formulas for a pinhole and a parallel-hole collimator are well established. For a pinhole, sensitivity is given by:
where w is the width of the pinhole (its diameter if the aperture is round), h is the distance of the plane of the pinhole from the point at which sensitivity is calculated, θ is the angle formed by a photon passing through the center of the aperture with the plane of the aperture, and k is a shape factor equal to 1 for a square pinhole and π/4 for a round pinhole. For a parallel hole collimator, sensitivity is:
where d is the free space between two septa, t is their thickness and a their height (i.e. the depth of the channels, which are assumed square in a square array). It has been recently postulated and experimentally verified that the on-axis sensitivity (i.e. for θ=π/2) of a slit-slat collimator with parallel slats is given by the geometric mean of EQ. 15 and EQ. 16. A discussion of this result follows:
The dependence of sensitivity and resolution on the parameters of the collimator is important for determining the scenarios in which slit-slat may be better than other collimation choices. Although explicit forms for the theoretic system resolution (Ro) and sensitivity (g) are not given in the article by Walrand et al. (Evaluation of novel whole-body high-resolution rodent SPECT (Linoview) based on direct acquisition of linogram projections. J. Nucl. Med. 2005; 46:1872-1880), both are plotted in
where Ro is the overall system resolution, Rg is the geometric (collimator) component, and Ri is the intrinsic detector resolution. In addition, w is the diameter of the pinhole (edge length for a square hole), f is the focal length of the collimator, and h is the distance from the aperture plane. Moreover, these formulas do not depend on any parameters of the axial slats (e.g., height, spacing, thickness).
An alternative approach is to model a slit-slat collimator as a pinhole collimator in the transverse dimension combined with a parallel-beam (or, equivalently, fan-beam) collimator in the axial direction (parallel-beam and fan-beam are identical in the axial dimension). In that case, one would expect that Ro(pinhole) from EQ. 17 would be accurate in the dimension collimated by the slit (i.e., transaxial, which is x in
where d is the gap between the septa and a is their height. (Note that the sum of the symbols a and c in Jaszczak et al. equals f in EQ. 18 and that b in Jaszczak et al. equals h.)
It is difficult to determine from the above argument the form of the sensitivity, but an educated guess may be the geometric mean of pinhole and parallel-beam:
where square holes (i.e., k=1) have been used to match the experimental geometry, and the parallel-beam sensitivity for septa of thickness t is given by the following:
The differences between these expectations and those of Walrand et al. are pursued herein through experimental and Monte Carlo techniques to determine the on-axis sensitivity and resolution of slit-slat collimation.
Setup: The configurations listed in Table 1 were assembled using tungsten slats (0.11 mm thick; 17 mm tall) separated by nylon spacers of thickness d (
To use preexisting material, the slit was formed from 2 tungsten plates separated by nylon spacers, obtaining a 90° acceptance angle as shown in
A point source (57Co; 1.3 MBq [35 μCi]) in a “pen” marker was mounted on a vertical positioning stage (
Data Acquisition Projections of the 57Co point source were acquired for 60 s each at distances of ˜10-205 mm above the aperture plane in increments of 5 mm for each of the configurations listed in Table 1. The energy window was set at 15%. The projections were 256×256 bins (1.11-mm edge length). These data were used for sensitivity and transaxial resolution measurements.
To smooth the axial profiles for a resolution measurement, a robotic stage moved the septa linearly in the axial direction over one period (d+t) during each view to average over one period of the slat-spacer pattern. This dedicated experimental run was used only for the measurement of axial resolution. Other acquisition parameters were identical to those described in the previous paragraph.
An additional “blank” dataset was taken with a blank-septa assembly and without the aperture slit (
Sensitivity Normalization: The blank dataset was analyzed to determine the effective product of the source emission rate and the camera efficiency. The central 46 bins in each dimension (2,116 bins in total), covering an area of about 2,619 mm2, were chosen as a region of interest. The counts in this region were fit as a function of h to the equation:
where A is the area of the region of interest (2,619 mm2), C is the emission counting rate of the source per acquisition frame, ε is the overall system efficiency, and f is the distance from the aperture plane to the detector (i.e., the focal length). Thus, this equation is the flux of photons on area A times the efficiency of detection. This equation was fit for the product Cε and for f. Background was estimated by averaging the scan without a point source present and a region of interest at each h that was far from the projection through the slit. The number of counts in each experiment less background and corrected for attenuation in the nylon spacers (19% (4)) was then divided by this Cε to determine sensitivity. This sensitivity is equivalent to that for an idealized collimator that does not have attenuating spacers.
Resolution Measurement: For each experimental configuration at each value of h, the axial slices of a region of interest of the projection were summed to form a transverse profile, and the transaxial slices of that region were summed to form an axial profile. These profiles were corrected by subtracting a flat background, which was measured with the background scan. The maximum of each adjusted profile was determined. The full width at half maximum (FWHM) was then calculated by interpolating the location of the half maximums. The transverse resolutions were scaled to object space by dividing by the magnification f/h. Axial resolutions were not scaled, because axial magnification is unity.
A Monte Carlo simulation was performed to model the slit-slat collimator. The model consisted of an infinite slit along the z direction and axial slats normal to this direction (
The experimental and Monte Carlo results for sensitivity are shown in
The experimental and Monte Carlo results for transaxial resolution are shown in
Overall, the sensitivities for the 8 configurations shown in
EQ. 19 by itself does not take into account the effect of slit penetration. The Monte Carlo results allow for this penetration, which increases sensitivity. When the Monte Carlo does not allow penetration, it agrees numerically very well with EQ. 19 (results are not shown for brevity). It may be possible that the effects of penetration can be well modeled by an effective diameter. By comparing Monte Carlo with and without penetration, one finds for 57Co and tungsten that weff=2.20 for w=2.03 mm and weff=4.20 for w=4.06 mm. Thus, penetration was found to be a relatively small component in this experiment. Monte Carlo data fall between the experimental and theoretic results, suggesting that penetration accounts for some of the difference between theory and experiment. Scatter, which is not included in the Monte Carlo or EQ. 19, is likely to account for at least some of the remaining difference.
For
For
In the configuration used for the experiment, it was found that measuring axial resolution with a FWHM metric posed difficulties due to the appearance of shadows from the slats in the projection. These shadows resulted from relatively short septa (i.e., a was small) and from their being positioned near the slit rather than near the detector. The projections had several local minima, making the numeric determination of FWHM complicated. Consequently, a dedicated experiment was performed to measure axial resolution by “wobbling” the axial slats. That is, the slats were linearly moved in the axial direction by one period (d+t) during each projection view. This movement had the effect of averaging out the shadowing, resulting in the expected triangular shape of the profiles.
Limitations in the experimental apparatus caused truncation for large values of h when the axial resolution was large (d=2.54 mm; a=17 mm). Nylon may be removed or replaced by a less attenuating material. However, the use of nylon spacers was a convenient and readily available method for keeping the slats evenly spaced and straight.
Walrand et al. suggested theoretic values for resolution and sensitivity of this slit-slat collimator. The data herein show that those predictions were inaccurate for sensitivity. The predictions for transaxial resolution were accurate (Ro(pinhole) in
The implications of the sensitivity and resolution formulas suggest that this collimator may be less useful for small-animal imaging than is a pinhole collimator because the sensitivity does not increase as rapidly for a small radius of rotation and the axial resolution does not improve as rapidly because there is no axial magnification. On the other hand, this collimator is likely to have a niche between pinhole collimation and parallel-beam/fan-beam collimation because the sensitivity improves with decreasing distance (unlike parallel-beam and fan-beam) but does not drop as rapidly as for pinhole collimation as distance increases. Further, transaxial magnification aids transaxial resolution by mitigating the effect of intrinsic detector resolution. Lastly, because the collimator provides complete data with a circular orbit, there is no artifactual axial blurring as in pinhole SPECT using a single circular orbit.
Thus, slit-slat collimation may be well described as a hybrid of pinhole and parallel/fan-beam collimation. Its on-axis sensitivity is well described as the geometric mean of these collimators (EQ. 19). Its resolution is described well by the pinhole resolution formula (EQ. 17) in the transaxial direction. Axial resolution is consistent with the parallel-beam formula (EQ. 18). Because this collimator has a distance dependence of h−1 for its sensitivity, it falls between pinhole and parallel/fan-beam. It is likely to be useful in intermediate scenarios such as imaging of limbs, the breast, medium-sized animals, and, possibly, the brain.
The main objective of the present work is to model the geometric sensitivity of slit-slat collimators. In the following, an analytical expression for the sensitivity of a slit-slat collimator valid both on- and off-axis is derived and validated by comparison to the aforementioned Monte Carlo simulation and the experimental data. More specifically, the expression derived shows both the dependence on h and θ, both of which are needed in the comparison of the different orbits being considered for use with slit-slat collimation. An attempt to further refine the model by providing some means to incorporate at least approximately penetration is presented next: it involves the use of the effective channel length used to model penetration in parallel and converging collimators and the derivation of a sensitivity-effective slit width. For completeness, its natural companion, the resolution effective slit width is also derived. The resulting formulas are then validated against literature experimental data as well as by Monte Carlo simulation.
The availability of sensitivity formulas is expected to benefit collimator design, simulation, and image reconstruction algorithms. It is particularly important in the case of slit-slat collimation because this technique is advantageous compared to parallel- and convergent-beam collimation only when the radius of rotation is less than a critical value that depends on sensitivity.
Sensitivity is defined herein as the fraction of the photons emitted by a point source that reaches the detector. This is often referred to as the geometrical sensitivity of the collimator because it excludes effects such as detection efficiency. Scatter and penetration are initially not considered.
For consistency with previous literature and with reference to
The infinitesimal solid angle subtended by the area element dA on the plane of the detector side of the slat (see
where H≡h+s+a=b+a, φ is the angle between the xy plane and the photon path connecting the point source P with dA, and b≡h+s is the distance of the point source from the top of the slat assembly (as is consistent with fan-beam collimator literature). With reference to
where i(d+t) is the y coordinate on the plane z=−(s+a) of the center of the ith septum (iεZ) and t is constant with z for all slats, which implies tapered channels. Except for one that is completely illuminated, channels are illuminated either on their left or right side, depending on the location of the point source. The width li of the illuminated area of the ith channel is given, respectively, by ±yi+(1∓i)(d+t)−t/2, in which the expression for yi is inserted to obtain:
where M≡(F+a)/|F−b| is the magnification provided by the slat assembly on the plane z=−(s+a). For the completely illuminated channel, which is not included in EQ. 24, lc=d.
Area elements are chosen so that dA=li dx. It is also convenient to define symbols for the slit magnification m, given by m=(s+a)/h, and the abscissa x0 of the projection of the center of the slit on the plane z=−(s+a), given by x0=−xP m. With these definitions, the projection of the edges of the slit on the plane z=−(s+a) are given by x2,1=x0±w(1+m)/2. Of course, x2,1 are limited, respectively, to ±Lx/2. From EQ. 22 the sensitivity of the ith channel is given by:
where li is given by EQ. 24 in which the term proportional to at is neglected for simplicity (usually a<<b and t<<d). Also, from
which is exact on the side of dA determined by the projection of the top edge of a slat.
Total sensitivity is obtained by summing EQ. 25 over all illuminated channels:
The summation limits are found by setting dA≧0, which implies d≧li≧0. In the two cases above (i.e. illumination on the left or right side of the channel), this inequality is:
Thus, in EQ. 27, iε{(I1, I1+1, . . . , I2−1, I2; Ic}, where Ic indicates that the completely illuminated channel must also be included in the summation. In EQ. 27 the two expressions for li (EQ. 24) must be used; they are valid, respectively, for I1≦i≦I0 and I0≦i≦I2. Next, it is convenient to express x, which is constrained between x1 and x2, as the sum of x0 with a deviation Δx ranging from Δx1≡max [−wH/(2h), −Lx/2+x0)] to Δx2≡min [wH/(2h), Lx/2−x0]. Substitution of I0 in EQ. 23 gives y0≡±M yP; analogously, substitution of I2 and I1 in EQ. 23 gives y2,1≡y0+Δy2,1, where Δy2,1≡MHFd/[a(F+a)]. As Δx was defined to replace x, so Δy≡yi−y0 is used to replace yi; Δy ranges from Δy1 to Δy2. Substitution of x=x0+Δx and yi=y0+Δy into EQ. 27 gives:
It is now convenient to define:
to reach the more compact form
This expression is still valid for all magnifications. Integration leads to a complicated result that then needs summation. Numerical evaluation is possible, but it is more useful to analyze cases in which realistic approximations do not compromise accuracy. This leads to forms more favorable to manipulation and the understanding of underlying physics. In most, but not all, common cases, either or both Δx/H and Δy/H are relatively small.
The width of the illuminated portion of the detector along the y axis is given by y2−y1=2 MHFd/[a(F+a)]. The region in which M is sufficiently small that (y2−y1)/H=2Fd/[a|F−b|]<<1 is herein named the off-focus region. By definition, in this region |Δy|/H<<1; therefore EQ. 31 reduces to:
where
has been used. The integral in EQ. 32 is independent of i, so it is a common factor in the summation. Using EQ. 24, the much simpler product:
is reached. The term i=I2+1 in the first summation in the curly brackets accounts for the completely illuminated channel Ic. Inclusion of I0 in both the second and third summation is possible because the associated term is zero. Integration over Δx/H is possible via the identity:
which is valid for D≠0, resulting in:
where
with η2.1≡Δx2,1/H. With the definitions of Δx2,1 this is:
η1=max[−w/(2h),−Lx/(2H)+x0/H] (EQ. 38)
and
η2=min[w/(2h),Lx/(2H)−x0/H] (EQ. 39)
Thus, unless truncation is present, η is the ratio of half a slit width to the distance from the plane of the slit. Next, the formula for the sum of consecutive integers:
is applied with the equality 2I0=I1+I2 (which follows directly from the definitions of I0, I1 and I2) to reach:
which, again with the definitions of I1, I0 and I2, is
When the approximation d/(d+t)≈1 is made in the last term, the definition of M and some algebra lead to:
This expression is valid far from the focal line of the slat assembly. The last term is recognized to be the same introduced to adapt parallel beam formulas to converging (R. A. Moyer, “A low-energy multihole converging collimator compared with a pinhole collimator,” J. Nucl. Med., vol. 15, pp. 59-64, 1974) and diverging (G. Muehllehner “A diverging collimator for gamma-ray imaging cameras,” J. Nucl. Med., vol. 10, pp. 197-201, 1969) beam geometry. Noticeable complexity is hidden in the constants C1 and C2. A simpler form is reached if the source is not too close to the slit.
The standard-use region is defined as that part of the off focus region which is also far enough from the slit that h>>w. This condition implies η2=−η1=w/(2h)≡η→0. In the standard-use region, thus, the radical in EQ. 37 can be expanded in Taylor series. To third order:
If only the first order term in η is considered, the following first order approximation to EQ. 43 is obtained:
This expression can be obtained directly from EQ. 27 by setting sin φ=sin φ0, i.e. a constant. This means that it is possible to use EQ. 45 whenever modeling the variation of the sin3 φ term over the illuminated area is not necessary.
Close to the slit, the condition h>>w is not satisfied. In this case, indicated as near-field, EQ. 45 does not provide accurate predictions. An evident symptom is that gsu→+∞ for h→0. A test to evaluate if other formulas should be used instead is provided below, which also derives the applicable sensitivity expressions.
The important case of parallel slats is obtained in the limit F→+∞. In this case M→1 and y0→yP. EQ. 31 and all ensuing equations become independent of yP, as intuition suggests. At the same time, from EQ. 30 and EQ. 33 or direct inspection of
In the case of a parallel slat assembly M is always 1. If the focal length F is instead finite, as the point source approaches the focal line M diverges and a different formula is eventually needed. This case, which is that of the focal region, is treated below.
The focal length enters all equations only from the ratio F/(F+a) in (4). This ratio is the expression of the ratio of the pitches on the patient and the detector side of the slat assembly, i.e. ΔyP/ΔyD. From
Diverging collimators may be of interest for use with high-resolution small-area collimators to achieve a field of view larger than the detector's area.
EQ. 45 and EQ. 46 only account for geometric sensitivity, but in experimental reality penetration contributes to sensitivity. Penetration is difficult to handle thoroughly with analytical models. A solution that has gained wide acceptance for parallel and converging collimators is to replace the channel length a with an equivalent length ac=a−2/μ, where μ is the linear attenuation coefficient of the material. For pinhole collimators it has been shown that the effects of penetration on sensitivity and resolution can be included through the concept of sensitivity- and resolution-effective diameters. In the following, a sensitivity- and a resolution-effective slit width are calculated for a slit-slat collimator. These expressions are expected to help model the effects of slit penetration on sensitivity and resolution. Of course, slit penetration needs to successively be combined with a model of slat penetration to model total penetration.
The sensitivity-effective width wse is defined as the width that a (hypothetical) slit not affected by penetration must have to pass the same number of photons as a real slit. An exact calculation in a general case is rather complex, but fortunately in typical imaging situations only a relatively narrow part of the photon beam contributes counts; this implies that the photon flux Φ can be treated as constant over the area of the slit that passes photons. Furthermore, it is possible to assume that all photons have the same incidence angle φ0. With these assumptions it is possible to calculate with a ray-tracing technique that the length of the intersection of the path of photons with the material forming the slit is:
for |x|≧w/2 and 0 otherwise. Here α is the full acceptance angle of the slit (
The total sensitivity gtot of a slit affected by penetration is given by the sum of the geometric sensitivity gg, due to photons passing through the open part of the slit, and the penetrative sensitivity gpen, due to photons passing through the material forming the aperture:
g
tot
=g
g
+g
pen=∫∫Φexp(−μΔL)dxdy/∫∫Φdxdy (EQ. 48)
where the integrals extend over the area where impinging photons eventually contribute to sensitivity. Since the slat assembly passes only photons reaching the plane at the bottom of the slat assembly with y1<y<y2 (again obtained by setting dA=0), the integral in dy, which is calculated on the plane of the slit, has limits y2,1 h/H:
From the definition of sensitivity-effective width, this sensitivity is set equal to that of a slit of width wse not affected by penetration (ideal case), which has the sensitivity gid:
where the integration area at the denominator (and numerator, before simplification) is the same as in the previous case.
Substitution of EQ. 47 into EQ. 49 and integration gives:
Comparison to EQ. 50 gives the sensitivity-effective slit width
Finally, slit penetration is modeled by substituting wse for w in the sensitivity formula of interest.
Unlike for the slit, penetration of the slat occurs mostly along the y axis. On the basis of the obvious geometric similarity with parallel-hole collimators, it is hypothesized that penetration of the slat can be modeled by the same means, i.e. by replacing a with ae=a−2/μ. The use of both wse and ae in the applicable sensitivity formula is expected to model all penetration.
For completeness and to take advantage of the formula developed for ΔL the natural companion of the sensitivity effective slit width is derived next. The resolution-effective slit width wre is defined as the width that a (hypothetic) slit not affected by penetration must have to result in the same Full Width at k Maximum (FWkM) of the point spread function as a real slit. This width is measured in the direction perpendicular to the slit, i.e. the x axis in
where k=0.5 if a half-maximum measurement is sought. In the case y0=yP, for which φ0=θ, the geometry becomes planar and identical to that of the resolution-effective diameter of a double-knife edge pinhole in the parallel direction. Correctly, under these conditions, EQ. 53 is identical in the two cases. For the same reason, it is expected that the expression of wre for slits with asymmetric profiles is the same as the literature expression of wre in the parallel direction for asymmetric profiles of the pinhole (R. Accorsi and S. D. Metzler, “Resolution-effective diameters for asymmetric-knife-edge pinhole collimators,” IEEE Trans. Med. Imag., vol. 24, pp. 1637-1646, December 2005).
To account for the resolution loss due to penetration, EQ. 53 (or the expression applicable to the profile of the slit) is then substituted for w in the expression for the resolution in the transverse direction of a slit-slat collimator, which has been shown above to be the same as for a pinhole:
where Ri is the FWHM of the intrinsic point spread function of the detector and f the distance from the slit to the detector.
Above, a parallel slat assembly with adjustable width (d) and height (a) was used with an adjustable-width (w) slit to acquire experimental data by scanning a point source along the z axis, i.e. for φ0=θ=π/2. Results were found in good agreement with the heuristic expectation that sensitivity follow the geometric mean of EQ. 15 and EQ. 16 under such conditions. Since for θ=π/2 EQ. 46 is the geometric mean of EQ. 15 and EQ. 16, the results above validate the dependence of EQ. 46 on h, w, d and a for an on-axis point source.
To verify dependencies on other parameters and in different conditions, the predictions of the formulas derived above were compared to results from Monte Carlo simulations. Since the formulas were derived to predict geometric sensitivity, a simple code was developed to simulate only total absorption in the slit and slat assembly. No scatter and no penetration were considered initially.
The dependence on h of EQ. 45, was verified (
For the same collimator parameters indicated above, the dependence on θ of EQ. 43 [EQ. 58 could not be used because it assumes θ=π/2], EQ. 45 and EQ. 63 was verified, respectively, for h=0.5, 50 and 320 mm (see
To avoid the interference of axial truncation, the dependence on φ0 of EQ. 45 and EQ. 58 was verified for h=0.5 and 50 mm for an infinite detector (
The simple Monte Carlo code was modified to calculate for each event the photon path ΔL in the slit material by solving analytically for the two intersections of the planes forming the slit with the straight line of the photon path (xa,b). Each event was then weighed by exp(−μΔL). Initially no slat penetration was modeled. On-axis sensitivity calculated from EQ. 58, EQ. 45, and EQ. 63 with the geometric value of the slit width w and with its sensitivity-effective width wse EQ. 52 was compared to Monte Carlo data in the Anger camera geometry for two different isotopes, 99mTc (140.5 keV, μ=3.40 mm−1, exclusive of coherent scattering) and 131I (364.5 keV, 0.401 mm−1), in tungsten (ρ=19.3 g/cm3) (
The role of slat penetration was later evaluated with a GEANT4 code (The standard electromagnetic physics package was used with default settings) modeling absorption and penetration in the slit or the slat assembly or both. Table 2 compares the GEANT4 sensitivity estimates to the theoretical values obtained from EQ. 45 with w and a substituted, respectively, by wse and ae as appropriate. GEANT4 data with no penetration or with only slit penetration allowed were used for cross validation of the simple Monte Carlo code previously used.
57Coa
99mTca
131Ia
131Ib
aParamerers typical of low energy slats: t = 0.11 mm, d = 1.27 mm, a = 34 mm, w = 2.03 mm, h = 100 mm, s = 800 mm.
bParameters typical of high energy slats: t = 1.727 mm, d = 3.81 mm, a = 60 mm, w = 2.03 mm, h = 100 mm, s = 800 mm.
The simple Monte Carlo code described in the previous section was also used to generate the projections of a point source on the detector. For this simulation were considered, first, different values of w, from 0 to 5 mm in 0.5 mm increments, with d=1.27 mm, t=0.11 mm, a=34 mm, f=114 mm, α=90° and parallel slats. Then, for w=2 mm, values of θ increasing from 50° to 90° in 2° increments were considered. The cases of 99mTc and 131I were both considered along with the ideal case of infinitely attenuating material. Different rows of the projections were summed to obtain profiles running in the transaxial direction (parallel to the x axis). The FWHM of the profiles was measured and resealed to the plane of the slit by multiplying by the factor h/(f+h). The result is compared to EQ. 53 in
The considerations above were verified by simulating the case of a slat assembly with negative focal length.
Good agreement with analytical formulas was achieved in all cases. In all plots error bars are at most comparable to the size of the markers and were not shown. Deviations from EQ. 45 occurred when expected from the derivation and indicated by the parameters 2η and 2Fd/[a|F−b|] (see below).
The proportionality factor 1/(4π) in EQ. 45 (and other sensitivity expressions) is consistent with the proportionality factor appearing in the expression for the sensitivity of a square pinhole (see EQ. 15), as expected from the rectangular footprint of the slit-slat's point spread function. The standard use formula seems to agree with that indicated in H. Wieczorek et al. (“Analytical model for pixelated SPECT detector concepts,” in Proc. Nuclear Science Symposium Conf. Record, Rome, 2004, pp. 2584-2588), whose derivation is largely left to the reader, and which, however, is limited to parallel slats and seems to be affected by at least some ambiguity in the symbols used. It is interesting to note that the argument above based on the geometric mean of EQ. 15 and EQ. 16 cannot be extended to the dependence of sensitivity on angle.
In the case study above it was found that both the model for slit and slat penetration provide reasonable estimates. Furthermore, slit penetration was found to account for most penetration. This can be understood with an argument based on the expression of the effective width and length. In fact, gg∝w/a and gtot∝wse/ae where gg indicates the geometric part of sensitivity and gtot indicates sensitivity inclusive of penetration contributions. Using a Maclaurin approximation, 1/ae≈[1+2/(μa)]/a. For α=π/2, from EQ. 45 with the effective quantities, gtot∝[w+(1−cot2θ)sin θ/μ][1+2/(μa)]/a. The fractional contribution of penetration to sensitivity is given by (gtot−gg)/gg=2/(μa)+(1−cot2θ)sin θ/(μw)+2(1−cot2θ)sin θ/(μ2aw). Since μa and μw are usually large numbers, the last term can be neglected. The remaining two terms represent, respectively, the contribution of slat and slit penetration to total sensitivity. The ratio of slat to slit penetration is given by 2w/[a (1−cot2θ)sin θ]. Since w/a is a small number, for angles of practical interest slit penetration is the largest contribution to penetration independently of energy.
Simulation with a GEANT4 code indicated that, at low energy and for typical values of the parameters, slit penetration alone is responsible for an increase of more than 10% whereas slat penetration adds a few percent to sensitivity. For comparison, at 122 keV a tungsten alloy collimator with 32.8 mm channels (i.e. the same geometrical parameters of a low-energy high-resolution, Philips Medical Systems, Andover Mass.) allows (gtot−gg)/gg=1.25% penetration according to H. O. Anger (“Radioisotope cameras,” in Instrumentation in Nuclear Medicine, G. J. Hine, Ed. New York: Academic, 1967, vol. 1, pp. 485-552). Therefore modeling slit penetration seems to be a more immediate concern than modeling slat penetration. The Monte Carlo data presented above indicate that the use of a sensitivity-effective diameter can model slit penetration quite accurately. Use of the effective slat length is also acceptable, but is less accurate and robust. In fact, it fails to predict penetration of low energy septa by high energy photons. However, the effective slat length models accurately the more significant case of high energy photons and high energy septa. In the case study considered, only the design of the slat was optimized for high energy: slit parameters were the same as for low energy. A slit designed for high energy would likely be larger (to match axial resolution) and have a profile different from the knife-edge considered here. Therefore, the high slit penetration seen in Table 2 should not be considered representative of a real situation.
Comparison of the theoretical prediction of the resolution effective slit width with Monte Carlo data showed a maximum deviation of less than 1% for 99mTc and 5% for 131I in the case considered.
The near-field and standard-use expressions do not account for truncation in the y direction; its effects can be incorporated by generalizing the expressions of I1 and I2. This can be done by considering that −Ly/2≦yi≦Ly/2. The generalized expressions of I1 and I2, which should have a form similar to η1,2, need then to be substituted in EQ. 36. This was not done for brevity. Truncation in the y direction, however, can and does affect sensitivity for finite detectors in near-field and standard use conditions, particularly for φ0<π/2. For this reason, the dependence on φ0 was verified in the case of an infinite detector. To complete validation, it was verified that indeed the conditions y2<−Ly/2 and y1>Ly/2 predict the values of φ0 at which sensitivity drops to zero (data not shown).
The model assumes septa of constant thickness. A calculation indicated that tapered septa can be modeled with a slight modification of EQ. 23 and EQ. 24. The consequences of the different shape of the septa were not pursued further. It is likely that the impact on sensitivity under standard conditions is minimal but may become sensible under particular circumstances, e.g. when the source is on the focal line of the slat assembly.
In
Formulas were verified for the case F=400 mm, i.e. a rather short focal length, albeit not extremely. This value was chosen both because it seemed a more demanding test for the formulas and because slit-slat collimators may prove to have favorable fabrication characteristics as compared to cone-beam collimators, which may be of particular interest when short focal lengths are needed.
The sensitivity formula is expected to benefit accurate sensitivity modeling in reconstruction algorithms. A closed form expression is useful because it can be incorporated in reconstruction algorithms in an efficient manner. The availability of sensitivity and resolution formulas is expected to help the comparison among different collimators and thus guide design choices. For example, since pinhole sensitivity follows a 1/h2 law, slit-slat sensitivity, which follows a 1/h law, does not decrease with distance as fast as pinhole sensitivity. For this reason, slit-slat collimation seems a better option from some lower limit until fan-beam collimation with its 1/(F−h) dependence provides better sensitivity at large distances. Of course these comparisons should be made for comparable resolutions (at least in some average sense) and field of view. Under these conditions, slit-slat collimation is expected to be of particular interest for objects having an intermediate size, i.e. from whole-body studies of small animals and imaging of medium size animals to single-organ (e.g. breast, brain, and heart) or pediatric imaging in humans.
The formulas presented also cover the case in which the slats focus on a line. The similarity (which is by no means a complete analogy) between parallel slit-slat and fan-beam collimators has been noted above. A focusing slit-slat collimator naturally relates to a cone-beam collimator. Whereas best resolution is achieved in both designs near the collimator, a cone-beam collimator has maximum sensitivity at its focal point, which is typically far from the collimator, especially when it is considered that fabrication difficulties usually force the focal length to be relatively large. Therefore, in a cone-beam collimator, maximum sensitivity is achieved in a region where resolution is relatively poor. The sensitivity profile of a converging slit-slat collimator, however, presents maxima both at the focal line of the slat assembly and next to the slit, where at least transverse resolution is comparable to that of pinhole imaging. This different mix of resolution, sensitivity and fabrication characteristics may be advantageous in applications similar to those for which cone-beam collimation has historically been applied.
Good agreement with Monte Carlo data suggests that the standard-use expression EQ. 45 models accurately the sensitivity of a slit-slat collimator over the range of interest of the point to-slit-plane distance in most applications. However, EQ. 45 is not valid (i) closer to the slit than a few slit widths, in which case the near-field expression EQ. 58 [EQ. 43 if off-axis] should be used; and (ii) for converging slats, near the focal line of the slat assembly, in which case the focal region expression EQ. 63 should be used [EQ. 62 if off the transaxial central plane, i.e. yP≠y0]. Expressions simpler than EQ. 63, i.e. EQ. 65, were derived for sensitivity at the focal line of the slat assembly. Further, the conditions 2η>>1 and 2Fd/[a|F−b|]>>1 were provided to evaluate if, respectively, near-field or focal region formulas should be used in place of the simpler standard-use formula. Finally, it was shown that it is a good approximation to incorporate the effects of penetration in the model with the use of the sensitivity-effective slit width EQ. 52 and septal length. A summary of relevant formulas with the relative conditions of applicability is provided in
The sensitivity formula in the standard-use region predicts infinite sensitivity for h→0. This is because in the standard use region w/h<<1 was assumed. In this section, first a boundary for the applicability of EQ. 45 is derived. The result shows that under usual conditions EQ. 45 should provide excellent approximations. However, in specialized applications such as small-animal imaging, in which the closest possible distances of approach are sought aggressively, it is possible that EQ. 45 deviates from the correct sensitivity value. For these cases a near-field formula is derived. Studying the divergence of EQ. 45 for h→0 also helps its validation.
The third order term in EQ. 44 is, for w<<h, the largest contributor to error. It can be used to assess when this approximation begins to break down. The fractional error associated to using EQ. 45 in place of EQ. 43 is given by:
This equation can be used to estimate the distance h0 beyond which EQ. 45 is approximate to within ±δ0. This is:
For example, for a 2 mm slit, 10% agreement or better is expected on-axis for h>2.23 mm. At points closer than h0, η is too large for Taylor expansion to be useful. The standard use region is abandoned as the slit is approached and η→+∞. In this case EQ. 43 should be used in place of EQ. 45; alternatively, a simpler formula can be derived restarting from EQ. 37.
First, the condition defining the near field, h<<w, i.e. 2η>>1, allows the linear term under the radical in EQ. 37 to be neglected. Thus:
Next, this expression and the definition of η2,1 can be substituted into EQ. 43. For x0=0 (which implies xP=0 and θ=π/2), the following expression is reached:
Unlike EQ. 45, this expression does not diverge for h→0 even in the ideal case of infinite detector. Substitution of θ=π/2 in EQ. 43 and EQ. 58 verifies that these two expressions are equivalent for on-axis sources, i.e. such that xP=x0=0.
The case of parallel slats can be derived by setting F→+∞ in EQ. 58. The obvious result is provided here for completeness:
It has been suggested that for some applications fields of view be scanned with focusing collimators with the focal locus inside the object of interest. In such cases, the standard-use formula EQ 45 would diverge inside the field of view, at the focal line of the slat assembly. In this section formulas are derived for the sensitivity near the focal line of the slat assembly. As the source approaches the focal line of the slat assembly, EQ. 43 diverges. More specifically, if |Δy|/H=2Fd/[a|F−d|]<<1 is not satisfied (this is the definition of focal region adopted herein), standard-use and near-field formulas cannot be used. The derivation must restart from EQ. 33. It is reasonable to assume that in most applications F>s by more than a few slit widths w. In these conditions, M is large only when h>>w, that is when (Δx2−Δx1)/H=w/h<<1. In the focal region, thus, |Δx|/H<<1 as in the standard-use region, and M→+∞; therefore EQ. 33 reduces to:
Since the integrand is constant, it can be factored out so that the remaining integral is trivial: it yields the width of the slit scaled to the plane z=−(s+a), i.e. wH/h. Next, the summation is handled by conversion to an integral in the continuous variable Δy. To this end, li is written as a function of Δy. This is done by solving EQ. 23 (still neglecting the term t/2) for i (d+t), whose expression is then substituted in EQ. 24; finally yi is replaced with y0+Δy. Still in the approximation at/(bd)<<1 made above:
where λ1=max [Δy1, −Ly/2−y0] and λ2≡min [Δy2, Ly/2−y0]. EQ. 60 becomes:
This expression also is analytically integrable via EQ. 35. However, the result is complex and not particularly rich with insights. For this reason, the derivation is now restricted to the simpler case for which yP=y0=0, which implies λ2=−λ1. EQ. 62 then falls under the case C=0. These hypotheses lead with some algebra to:
where λ2=−λ1≡λ was used. In the common case in which the projection of the point source on a finite detector is not truncated, λ=FHd/[a|F−b|] so that EQ. 63 simplifies to:
However, as the source approaches the focal line, a finite detector is eventually entirely covered and truncation becomes inevitable. Correctly, EQ. 63 does not diverge for b→F (which implies M→+∞) because λ→y/2 and M appears otherwise only at a denominator. In fact:
which does not diverge even for an infinite detector; for Ly→+∞ sensitivity is given by:
This result is the same obtained from H. Gotoh and H. Yagi (“Solid angle subtended by a rectangular slit,” Nucl. Instrum. Methods, vol. 96, pp. 485-486, 1971), which gives an exact formula for the solid angle subtended by a rectangular opening. In fact, it is possible to derive an expression for the solid angle subtended by an infinite slit by using the formula provided in Gotoh and Yagi, which provides an exact analytical form for the solid angle subtended by a rectangular opening. The following values of the variables of Gotoh and Yagi are used: x2,1=h cot θ±w/2, y2,1→±∞, and z=h. This gives:
In the focal region, w<<h. It is then possible to expand the arctan functions in Taylor series to first order:
Substitution of this result in EQ. 67 gives
Division by 4π and multiplication by d/(d+t) to account for the unobstructed detector area yields EQ. 66.
Therefore, the singularity in EQ. 45 is avoided because of consistent modeling of the solid angle, not only because of the inclusion of the finite size of the detector in the model. As expected, this limit is the same as that of EQ. 64 for λ→+∞; a second check for EQ. 64 is obtained in the opposite extreme case, in which λ<<H and the Taylor expansion: √(1+x)≅1+x/2 can be used in EQ. 64 to show that
Substitution of λ with its definition shows EQ. 70 to be equivalent to the standard-use expression EQ. 45.
The availability of non-diverging formulas is of interest for example in the implementation or validation of the projectors needed for image reconstruction in such cases.
a, 20b, and 20c compare experimental data from a 57Co point source with Monte Carlo results that model the ideal slit-slat (MC no truncation; MC simple) and Monte Carlo results that more realistically model the experimental setup using the materials available (MC, MC full). The experimental data track the more realistic Monte Carlo. The theoretical curves track the more ideal Monte Carlo. The theoretical sensitivities g(PIN) and g(PIN|PB) are, respectively, the sensitivity of the pinhole collimator and the geometric mean of the sensitivities of parallel-beam and pinhole. The results show good agreement overall between the theoretical curves, the Monte Carlo results, and the experimental results. Thus, on-axis slit-slat sensitivity is well modeled as the geometric mean of pinhole and parallel-beam; the resolutions are well modeled as pinhole in the transaxial direction and parallel-beam in the axial direction.
Published formulas for the geometric resolution of pinhole, fan-beam, and cone-beam collimation were used to calculate the average sensitivity (
Point-source sensitivity, g, is the fraction of photons emitted from a point in space that reach the detector. As shown in
The average resolution was calculated in object space (i.e., reconstruction resolution). Thus, any magnification by the collimator mitigates the impact of detector blurring. The weighting for resolution was the square-root of sensitivity. The rationale for this choice is that reconstruction resolution depends not only on the spatial resolution of each detected photon, but also on the number of detected photons. The general rule that uncertainties improve with the square-root of the number of samples is applied. Thus, the specific calculation of resolution was: Avg. Res.=∫Rsys√{square root over (g)}dA/∫√{square root over (g)}dA, where Rsys is the system resolution, which is the full-width at half maximum (FWHM) of the geometric-resolution distribution convolved with a Gaussian distribution with FWHM of Ri/M. The detector intrinsic resolution is Ri (3.5 mm FWHM), and M is the magnification.
The pinhole and slit-slat parameters were optimized at each object diameter to give the maximum sensitivity for the same resolutions. The fan-beam and cone-beam collimators use a 1 mm diameter, 40 mm long hole with a 0.2 mm septal wall. The focal length is 45 cm. These parameters were not re-optimized at each object diameter, but were considered to be typical values for clinical collimators.
a and 22b shows the transaxial and axial fields of view (FOV) as a function of distance from the collimator.
The particular comparison in this section has some bias in favor of cone-beam and single-pinhole over fan-beam and slit-slat, respectively, since the disk was only in the central transverse plane where cone-beam and single-pinhole sensitivities are highest and axial truncation is not an issue. For both fan-beam and slit-slat, the average sensitivity would be constant for a cylinder of that diameter as the length increased, until the projection is truncated. On the other hand, the average sensitivity would drop for cone-beam and single-pinhole as the cylinder's length increased. For example, if one considered a cylinder with length and diameter of 20 cm, cone-beam's average sensitivity would be reduced by 18% and pinhole's by 25% compared with a 20 cm-diameter disk in the central plane; this would reduce the cross-over point for pinhole and slit-slat from 14 cm to about 11 cm. A further bias against multislit in this comparison is that the side slits were oriented as the central slit instead of focusing towards a region of interest. This is done to maintain the same average resolution for the side slits as the central slit. When the slit is tilted (focused) such that its plane is not parallel to the detector plane, the resolution changes as a function of angle, as has been shown in pinhole data. The point-spread function is determined considering focusing slits and considering this effect in optimizations for focusing the multislit collimator.
In this comparison, there is some bias in favor of slit-slat over fan-beam in that slit-slat is re-optimized for each object diameter in order to keep matching resolution values with fan-beam, although fan-beam was not re-optimized. The rationale for this was to compare the new collimator against clinically available collimators. This comparison does not fully use the fan-beam's field of view, which puts it at a disadvantage. Consequently, it has been considered to change the focal length of the fan-beam so as to just avoid truncation. For a 20-cm diameter object, the focal length would be 23.3 cm. This would increase the fan-beam sensitivity at that point by 26%. Further, the cross-over point would change from 27 cm in diameter to 25 cm in diameter. However, it would be extremely difficult to fabricate such a short focal-length collimator.
The average sensitivities and resolutions take into account that the ROR for pinhole and slit-slat is larger than that for fan-beam and cone-beam. One should note that cone-beam does not give complete data with a circular orbit; reconstructions of circular-orbit data have axial blurring artifacts, just as single-pinhole.
The above suggests that slit-slat offers favorable geometric sensitivity over fan-beam for objects smaller than about 27 cm in diameter (2.2 times better than fan-beam for 15-cm diameter; 1.5 times for 20-cm diameter) and over pinhole for objects larger than ˜14 cm (11 cm if considering cylinders instead of disks).
The calculation above has been repeated using the parameters for the Siemens ultra-high-resolution parallel-beam (UHRPB) collimator. In addition, those hole parameters have been taken and used in a “cardio fan-beam”. That is, the focal length of the collimator was set to 65 cm. There is not much change in the cross-over points found above (see Table 3). In addition, when allowing for truncated projections, it is found that the cross-over points shift more in favor of multislit-slat than stated above.
The advantage of multislit-slat over the fan-beam collimator is described above; namely, that multislit-slat is more sensitive than fan-beam for objects up to 27 cm in diameter (
This more realistic assessment has also been applied to cardiac imaging. Multislit-slat is more sensitive than the Siemens UHRPB by 85% and the UHRFB by 34%, for equal average resolutions.
An assessment of multislit-slat for cardiac imaging was performed using a digital phantom and truncated projections. In other words, the average resolutions and sensitivities of the collimators were assessed only over the cardiac region of the body. It is required that the collimators do not truncate the heart during a 180-degree rotation (left posterior oblique through right anterior oblique) and that the average resolutions be the same. The axis of rotation, shown in
Chang, W., H. Liang and J. Liu (Assessing geometric efficiency of cardiac SPECT systems. J NUCL MED MEETING ABSTRACTS, 2006. 47(suppl—1): p. 120P-a-) have independently found a factor of 2.7 improvement for slit-slat over parallel-beam on the MarC-SPECT dedicated cardiac scanner.
The effect of aperture penetration by high-energy photons on pinhole sensitivity has previously been investigated. Not all photons are stopped by the aperture. An analytic expression has been derived for the angle and depth dependence of the sensitivity of pinhole collimators, including the significant, often dominant, edge-penetration term. It has been found that the new analytic expression agrees well with experimental measurements of sensitivity over a range of aperture diameters, collimator materials and photon energies. Independent experimental confirmation was made by Williams et al. (Investigation of efficiency and spatial resolution using pinholes with small pinhole angle. IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science, 2003. 50(5): p. 1562-1568). The general equation derived for pinhole sensitivity is:
wherein μ is the attenuation coefficient of the collimator material, d is the aperture diameter, α is the opening angle of the pinhole aperture knife-edge, h is the distance from the plane of the aperture to the point source, and θ is the angle between the plane of the aperture and the line that passes through the pinhole center and the point source.
EQ. 71 can be used to derive the (sensitivity-) effective diameter:
d
e
2
=d(d+2μ−1 tan α/2+2μ−2d−1 tan2α/2) (EQ. 72)
EQ. 72 has been reported as an exact solution for Anger's effective diameter.
A common approach to approximating penetrative contributions has been to utilize an effective diameter and to parameterize the angular dependence as sinxθ, where x is determined by fitting to detailed simulations or empirical measurements. EQ. 71 itself provides a purely analytical accurate prediction of the angular dependence (solid line,
An analytic form for the point-response function (PRF) of a pinhole aperture has been derived. The function is:
The multi-line equation for ΔL may be found in reference Metzler et al. equation 5 (Analytic determination of the pinhole collimator's point-spread function and RMS resolution with penetration. IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 2002. 21(8): p. 878-887).
The distinction of sensitivity-effective and resolution-effective diameters has recently been introduced (Accorsi, R. and S. D. Metzler: Analytic determination of the resolution-equivalent effective diameter of a pinhole collimator. IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 2004. 23(6): p. 750-763). It has been found in the literature that resolution had been estimated by using the effective diameter of Paix (Pinhole Imaging of Gamma Rays. Physics in Medicine & Biology, 1967. 12(4): p. 489-500), which had been calculated based on equivalent sensitivity. In introducing resolution-effective diameters, it has been found that the direction of measurement is important. Two orthogonal directions were calculated: parallel to the direction of tilt (θ measures this tilt) and perpendicular. The formulas are:
This has been followed up with experimental evaluation and has good agreement with the predictions of EQ. 74. FIG. 11 of Metzler, S. D. and R. Accorsi (Resolution- versus sensitivity-effective diameter in pinhole collimation: experimental verification. Physics in Medicine and Biology, 2005. 50(21): p. 5005-5017) shows the measured resolution-effective diameters.
Simulations of helical orbits using a digital (computer-simulated) disk (Defrise) phantom have been performed. The digital phantom hag five disks of uniform activity. The disks are 2.848 cm in diameter and have a thickness of 0.178 cm. The disks are separated by 0.178 cm. The simulated tungsten aperture was 0.77 mm in diameter with a 101° opening angle. The focal length of the pinhole collimator was 16.3 cm. The simulation modeled the geometric and penetrative sensitivity of the collimator and also includes both obliquity and detector resolution effects.
a, 30b, 30c, and 30d compare reconstructions from circular-orbit and helical-orbit projection data. The circular-orbit projection used 128 views over a 360° rotation.
A robotic linear stage (
Experimental phantom data for helical pinhole SPECT were acquired using a 42 mm-diameter micro cold-disk phantom (Data Spectrum Corp., Hillsborough, N.C.) filled with Tc-99m. The five active (hot) disks were 3.9 mm thick and separated by 4.3 mm. The phantom has two caps at one end for filling.
The same helical system was used to acquire a mouse MDP (bone) scan. The mouse was imaged using a circular and a helical orbit (
Mechanical and electronic shifts are defined below. These are sometimes referred to in the context of “center-of-rotation” correction. After defining the terms relevant for single-pinhole calibration, data is shown on the effect of uncompensated shifts. A method developed for determining the shifts for single-pinhole is described. Below is described how these shifts affect slit-slat imaging and a method for measuring them.
Mechanical shifts determine the position of the center of the aperture relative to the AOR. These shifts are a property of the aperture. The central axial plane is perpendicular to the detector plane and contains the AOR. In a well aligned system, that plane would also contain the center of the aperture The transaxial mechanical offset (τx) is the distance from this plane. The transaxial shift can be defined because there is a reference point, the AOR. For slit-slat, the axial mechanical shift is not expected to be relevant unless the sensitivity and PSF depend on the axial displacement from the septa.
Electronic shifts determine the readout position of a photon. Electronic shifts are a property of the detector. The electronic shift is the difference between the actual electronic readout of a particular physical position on the detector and its expected readout. If a source is collimated in the central plane and perpendicular to the detector, the expected transverse readout is zero. The actual transverse readout is the transverse electronic shift (εx). Electronic shifts may be corrected by shifting the projection data Mechanical shifts may not be corrected this way. It is expected that the axial electronic shift (εz) is relevant only when jointly reconstructing projections from multiple collimators.
A digital hot-rod phantom was used to generate simulated projection data of a pinhole collimator following a circular orbit (ROR=5.0 cm; focal length=15.0 cm). The simulation was for a single slice—equivalent to either the central slice of single-pinhole or to any axial slice of slit-slat. The simulation allowed for the introduction of both mechanical and electronic shifts in the projection data. The projections were reconstructed using MLEM without accounting for mechanical or electronic shifts. This typically introduced artifacts into the reconstruction, as may be seen in
A method for measuring the mechanical (τ) and electronic shifts (ε) of a pinhole collimator system by using a point source has been developed. The point source is scanned using a parallel-beam collimator; the average value of the centroids over a 360 deg. scan is equal to the electronic shift. This scan is only needed infrequently because the electronic shift is relatively stable. After every imaging session with pinhole collimation, a point-source scan is performed. This scan, when the electronic shift is known, gives the mechanical shift of the aperture by fitting to the expected transverse (x) and axial (z) centroid locations (y measures the distance from the AOR to the detector plane). The location's (x,y,z) are:
It has been found that the collimators and gamma cameras shift and/or tilt during rotation. This is not surprising because of their weight. However, even a small amount of movement can have a large impact on reconstruction results. Under the assumption that the majority of image degradation from tilt is due to the axial shifting of the aperture, a point-source method for measuring the angular-dependent shift for each of the gamma cameras has been developed. The method determines the expected position of the point-source and then calculates the axial shift from the difference with the experimental axial centroid.
A laser method for simultaneously measuring the angular-dependent radius of rotation and the axis of rotation has been determined (Metzler, S. D. and N. H. Patil: Measuring the Variation in Radius of Rotation as a Function of Gantry Angle for Ultra-High-Resolution Pinhole SPECT. IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science, 2005. 52(5): p. 1236-1242). An important experimental aspect is that phantoms are typically contained in a cylinder, the center of which is easily identified since it has a tapped hole for mounting. The hole was aligned with the laser to have a very accurately centered phantom.
The data show several results relevant to the specific aims:
The slit-slat collimator can be well characterized as a combination of a pinhole collimator in the transverse direction and a parallel-beam collimator in the axial direction. In this model, the transverse resolution behaves like a pinhole collimator and the axial resolution behaves like a parallel-beam collimator:
where w is the slit width, h is the distance from a point source to the slit plane, f is the focal length, measured from the slit plane to the detector, a is the height of the slats, Ri is the detector's intrinsic resolution, and d is the gap between slats.
The on-axis sensitivity is given by the geometric mean of a parallel-hole collimator and a pinhole collimator with square holes:
The sensitivity and resolution have been verified above theoretically, experimentally, and through Monte Carlo. These results are now applied to tomographic imaging of experimentally acquired phantom projections. The calibration and reconstruction procedures are described below. The reconstructed resolution in the transverse direction is shown to be consistent with EQ. 76.
A prototype slit-slat collimator was constructed in two pieces, the slit-assembly (
Phantom acquisitions were acquired using a micro hotrod, micro cold-rod, and a mini cold-rod phantom (Models ECT/HOT-MMP/I, ECT/DLX/MMP, ECT/DLX/MP, respectively, Data Spectrum Corp., Hillsborough, N.C.) filled with aqueous 99mTc pertechnetate. These phantoms have six sectors of hot or cold rods. The diameters of the rods are 1.2, 1.6, 2.4, 3.2, 4.0, and 4.8 mm.
One set of experiments used a slit width of 3.0 mm. The phantom projections were acquired using 120 views (3 deg. step) with 30 s/view. The radius of rotation (ROR), measured from the slit plane to the axis of rotation, was 86 mm. The three phantoms were filled with 20 mCi, 18 mCi, and 27 mCi, respectively.
An additional experiment using only the micro hot-rod phantom was conducted. The phantom was filled with 1.8 mCi. Its projections were acquired using 240 views (1.5 deg. step) with 60 s/view. The ROR was 71 mm.
All scans were acquired using projections of 256×128 pixels (1.78 mm edge length). The energy window was centered on the 99mTc peak and was ±10% of the central value.
The mechanical and electronic shifts of the system were determined using a 57Co point-source scan with the same setup as for the phantom acquisitions. The geometry is shown in
The point source was acquired using 120 views. The projections were compressed to centroids (Cx) and fit for to the equation:
where φ is the rotation angle of the source and (x0, y0) is the position of the point source. The output of the fit is τx, εx, and (x0, y0).
In the geometry of this particular experiment, the phantom and point-source were rotated instead of the detector. The rod mounting the sources (
The projection data were reconstructed using an maximum-likelihood estimation-maximization iterative algorithm that modeled the sensitivity and point-spread function based on EQ. 76 and EQ. 78. Each slice was treated independently; thus, axial resolution was not modeled. The reconstruction used 100×100×128 voxels, where the number of voxels in the axial dimension matches the number of axial pixels in the projection data. Fifty (50) iterations were performed.
a shows a sample fit of EQ. 79 to the point-source projection centroids.
Phantom projections for w=3.0 mm are shown in
Reconstructions for w=3.0 mm are shown in
The sensitivity and resolution of slit-slat collimation have previously been validated. Those forms have been incorporated into a 2D iterative reconstruction through the use of EQ. 76, EQ. 77, and EQ. 78.
Determination and incorporation of calibration parameters are important for any reconstruction. The results of
a, 54b, 54c, and 55a show the projections and
This is consistent with
Although the prototype collimator was not ideal for several reasons, it provided a sufficient apparatus to assess the potential for tomographic imaging with slit-slat collimation. The prototype was limited by the use of nylon as separators between the septa. This caused attenuation and scatter. Future collimators should attempt to mitigate this problem. An additional problem due to limitation in available materials was the short septa that were used. These short septa did not provide good axial resolution. Future versions of the collimator should use longer septa.
Slit-slat collimation provides a viable choice for tomographic imaging. Herein, the transaxial resolution formula has been found to well predict the transaxial resolution of reconstructions. Previous studies based on this predicted resolution have suggested that this collimator may be the best choice for mid-size (100-200 mm diameter) objects.
A slit-slat collimator may be well described as a hybrid of single-pinhole and parallel- or fan-beam collimation, combining pinhole's magnification in the transaxial direction with parallel- or fan-beam's complete-sampling properties and large field of view in the axial dimension. A conceptual drawing is shown in
It is likely that slit-slat collimation can fill a clinical need for imaging medium-size objects, since its sensitivity improves with decreasing distance (unlike parallel beam and fan beam), but it does not drop as rapidly as single pinhole as distance increases. However, it is important to study the features of this collimator experimentally to determine the scenarios where slit-slat may be a superior collimator choice. Herein, the axial and transaxial resolution of a slit-slat collimator are investigated, and the results are compared with Monte Carlo simulation studies and analytic resolution formulas for pinhole and parallel-beam collimators.
Based on the collimator geometry one would expect that Anger's on-axis resolution formula for pinhole (PIN) collimation would apply in the direction collimated by the slit, i.e., transaxially:
where Ro is the overall system resolution, Rg is the geometric (collimator) component, and Ri is the intrinsic detector resolution. In addition, w is the diameter of the pinhole (edge length for a square hole), f is the distance from the slit to the detector surface, a is the septal height, and h is the distance of the point source to the plane of the slit. One could define a parameter c (not shown in
In the axial dimension, one would expect that the parallel-beam (PB) resolution formula would apply:
where d is the gap between septa.
A prototype slit-slat collimator was constructed with tungsten slats, separated by nylon spacers, forming the axial septa, and two tungsten plates forming the transaxial slit. The slats were 0.11 mm thick and 17 mm tall. The slit was formed from two tungsten plates at a 90° acceptance angle, separated by nylon spacers of either 2.03 or 4.06 mm (
A point source (57Co; 1.3 MBq (35 μCi)) in a “pen” marker was mounted on a vertical positioning stage. (
Source data were collected at distances of 10 to 205 mm above the aperture plane, in increments of 5 mm, for each of the collimator configurations. For the axial resolution data collection, to obtain a measurement independent of the particular relative shift between the point source and the slats, the septa were moved linearly by one period (d+t) during each projection view.
For each experimental configuration at each value of h, (distance above the aperture plane), the axial slices of a region of interest of the projection were summed to form a transverse profile and the transaxial slices of that region were summed to form an axial profile. These profiles were corrected by subtracting a background, whose level was estimated by averaging a scan without the point source present and a region of interest at each h that was far from the projection through the slit. The maximum of each adjusted profile was determined, and the full width at half maximum was then calculated by interpolating the location of the half maximums. The transverse resolutions were scaled to object space by dividing by the magnification f/h. Axial resolutions were not scaled since axial magnification is unity.
A series of Monte Carlo simulations was conducted to model the eight collimator configurations. Each run modeled 5×108 photons emitted isotropically from a point source at each position h; the values of h ranged from 10 to 205 mm in steps of 5 mm. One mode included the effects of slit penetration (linear attenuation coefficient of 4.95 mm−1) and detector parallax (linear capture coefficient of 0.374 mm−1) on the resolution, while another mode did not take into account these effects. Further, each configuration was run with and without modeling the hole at the top of the multiple-pinhole mount that was used as a support for the slit-slat assembly; this mount unintentionally truncated the axial field of view.
The experimental and Monte Carlo results for transverse resolution are shown in
The experimental and Monte Carlo results for axial resolution are shown in
In the experimental data several local minima were seen in the axial profiles; a typical axial profile is shown in
Limitations in the experimental apparatus caused truncation for large values of h when the axial resolution was large (d=1.27 mm; a=17 mm). Materials used to set up the experimental apparatus were chosen because they were available. Indeed, the measured axial resolution is not indicative of the performance of a future system; the amount of tungsten available was limiting in the construction of slats in this prototype. Future versions of this collimator should have taller slats yielding improved axial resolution. In addition, future experiments should be conducted by either removing the nylon spacers or replacing them with a less attenuating material. In the current measurement, the use of nylon spacers was a convenient and readily available method for keeping the slats straight and evenly spaced.
The implications of the sensitivity and resolution behavior of slit-slat collimation suggest that this collimator may be less useful for small-organ and small-animal imaging than a pinhole collimator, because the sensitivity does not increase as rapidly for a small radius of rotation and the axial resolution does not improve as rapidly due to the lack of axial magnification. However, this collimator is likely to have a niche between pinhole and parallel-/fan-beam collimation because the sensitivity improves with decreasing distance, but does not drop as rapidly as pinhole as distance increases. Further, transaxial magnification aids transaxial resolution by mitigating the effect of intrinsic detector resolution. Lastly, since the collimator provides complete data with just a circular orbit, there are no artifactual axial blurring as in pinhole SPECT with a simple circular orbit.
Both the experimental and Monte Carlo data suggest that the transverse resolution of a slit-slat collimator is well described by Anger's on-axis formula for pinhole collimation, and the axial resolution is well described by the parallel-beam resolution relationships. Due to its sensitivity and resolution characteristics, slit-slat collimation is likely to be useful in intermediate scenarios such as imaging of limbs, the breast, medium-sized animals and the brain.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US07/06807 | 3/19/2007 | WO | 00 | 2/2/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60783077 | Mar 2006 | US | |
60839666 | Aug 2006 | US |