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Study of sensitivity and resolution for full ring PET prototypes based on continuous crystals and analytical modeling of the light distribution

Authors :
Enrique Muñoz
Gabriela Llosa
Carlos Lacasta
Josep F. Oliver
A. Ros
A. Etxebeste
José Bernabéu
John Barrio
Source :
Physics in medicine and biology. 64(3)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Sensitivity and spatial resolution are the main parameters to maximize in the performance of a PET scanner. For this purpose, detectors consisting of a combination of continuous crystals optically coupled to segmented photodetectors have been employed. With the use of continuous crystals the sensitivity is increased with respect to the pixelated crystals. In addition, spatial resolution is no longer limited to the crystal size. The main drawback is the difficulty in determining the interaction position. In this work, we present the characterization of the performance of a full ring based on cuboid continuous crystals coupled to SiPMs. To this end, we have employed the simulations developed in a previous work for our experimental detector head. Sensitivity could be further enhanced by using tapered crystals. This enhancement is obtained by increasing the solid angle coverage, reducing the wedge-shaped gaps between contiguous detectors. The performance of the scanners based on both crystal geometries was characterized following NEMA NU 4-2008 standardized protocol in order to compare them. An average sensitivity gain over the entire axial field of view of 13.63% has been obtained with tapered geometry while similar performance of the spatial resolution has been proven with both scanners. The activity at which NECR and true peak occur is smaller and the peak value is greater for tapered crystals than for cuboid crystals. Moreover, a higher degree of homogeneity was obtained in the sensitivity map due to the tighter packing of the crystals, which reduces the gaps and results in a better recovery of homogeneous regions than for the cuboid configuration. Some of the results obtained, such as spatial resolution, depend on the interaction position estimation and may vary if other method is employed.

Details

ISSN :
13616560
Volume :
64
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics in medicine and biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1dd346ca4357970ad16de678bed5e394