The document discusses positron emission tomography (PET) imaging. It explains that PET detects coincident gamma ray emissions to localize radioactive tracer uptake in the body. PET with computed tomography (PET-CT) provides co-registered anatomical and functional images without need for separate transmission scanning. 3D PET acquisition collects more sinograms than 2D PET and has better signal-to-noise ratio without collimation. Factors influencing PET spatial resolution include number of detected photons, positron range, non-collinearity of emissions, crystal size. Time-of-flight PET detects emission timing to further localize annihilation events for improved image quality.
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Pet Scan Notes
The document discusses positron emission tomography (PET) imaging. It explains that PET detects coincident gamma ray emissions to localize radioactive tracer uptake in the body. PET with computed tomography (PET-CT) provides co-registered anatomical and functional images without need for separate transmission scanning. 3D PET acquisition collects more sinograms than 2D PET and has better signal-to-noise ratio without collimation. Factors influencing PET spatial resolution include number of detected photons, positron range, non-collinearity of emissions, crystal size. Time-of-flight PET detects emission timing to further localize annihilation events for improved image quality.
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1 What are the two most important types of Emission computed tomography?
A:SPECT and PET.
2 Describe the contrast and localization mechanism of PET. A: See textbook 2.11 and posted notes. PET: coincidence detection because the two annihilation photons originate at the same time; a coincidence generates a line of response origin of annihilation lies somewhere on line of response 3 Why is it necessary to do a transmission imaging with a Ge-source before the PET scan in a conventional PET imaging? Do we still need to do the transmission imaging in the latest PET scanner? A: To correct attenuation. There is no need for that with PET-CT. See textbook section 2.11.4.1 and slide 35 of the posted notes. PET-CT: co-registered patient anatomy and activity distribution; attenuation correction for free After tracer injection, the patient waits for typically 2 hrs CT scan over the relevant body part is acquired acquire PET scan of the same body part 4 Compare the 2D and 3D acquisition mode of PET. Which one has a better SNR? A: See textbook section 2.11.6 and slide 25 of the posted notes. 2D: septa; few cross plan; (2n-1) sonograms for 2D acquisition; septa will prohibit coincidence that is farther aprt than one detector range 3D: n^2 sinograms for 3D acquisition; no collimator so detect any photons 5. Explain the factors that influence the spatial resolution of PET. A: See textbook section 2.11.5 1. The number of photons collected by each detector. Larger number of photons leads to better SNR and better spatial resolution. 2. The finite distance which the positron travels before annihilation. 3. The slight deviation from a nominal angle of 180 degrees between the pair of photons. 4. The size of the crystal. 5. What is TOF-PET? A: See the slide 19 and 20 of the posted notes. TOF (time of flight) detection leads to additional information about the location of the annihilation event; gain in image quality (smaller noise, shorter image acquisition time, less dose to the patient)