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RAD 466-L 8 by Dr. Halima Hawesa

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1 RAD 466-L 8 by Dr. Halima Hawesa
SPECT/CT TECHNOLOGY & FACILITY DESIGN RAD 466-L 8 by Dr. Halima Hawesa

2 Objective To become familiar with basic SPECT/CT technology, and review considerations in establishing a new SPECT/CT facility

3 Content SPECT cameras Image Quality & Camera QA SPECT/CT scanners
Design of SPECT/CT facilities

4 What is SPECT Camera gamma cameras.
The most widely used gamma cameras are the so-called Anger cameras, in which a series of phototubes detects the light emissions of a large single crystal, covering the field of view of the camera. SPECT imaging systems consist of single- or multiple-head gamma cameras which rotate around the patient, thereby acquiring the projections necessary for reconstruction of axial slices. SPECT stand for Single Positron Emitting Computing Tomography.

5 SPECT Camera Components
Collimator NaI(Tl) crystal Light Guide (optical coupling) PM-Tube array Pre-amplifier Position logic circuits (differential & addition etc.) Amplifier (gain control etc) Pulse height analyser Display (Cathode Ray Tube etc).

6 Scintillators Density Z Decay Light Atten . (g/cc) time yield length (ns) (% NaI) (mm) Na(Tl) I 3.67 51 230 100 30 BGO 7.13 75 300 15 11 LSO 7.4 66 47 75 12 GSO 6.7 59 43 22 15 BGO - Bismuth Gremanate LSO - Lutetium Oxyorthosilicate GSO - Gadolinium Oxyorthosilicate Na(Tl) I works well at 140 keV, and is the most common scintillator used in SPECT cameras

7 Scintillation detector
Amplifier PHA It is important to explain why there is a proportionality between the photon energy absorbed in the detector and the pulse height Scaler

8 Pulse height analyzer Pulse height (V) UL LL Time
The pulse height analyzer allows only pulses of a certain height (energy) to be counted. counted not counted

9 Gamma camera Used to measure the spatial and temporal distribution of a radiopharmaceutical

10 GAMMA Camera

11 Gamma camera (principle of operation)
Position X Position Y Energy Z PM-tubes Detector Collimator Types of collimator Pinhole Parallel hole Diverging Converging collimators.

12 GAMMA CAMERA Photons are selected by a collimator, hits the detector crystal, which produce light flashes that are detected and amplified by the photomultipliers, then send to digitizer, and then to computer processor for image reconstruction, then to display on monitor.

13 PM-tubes Detect and amplify the light flash produced by the scintillation crystal.

14 GAMMA-ray Scintillation Detector
gamma-ray energy converted to light Light converted to electrical signal Photomultiplier Tube gamma-Rays Light Electrical Signal Scintillation Crystal

15 Photomultiplier Tubes
Light incident on Photocathode of PM tube Photocathode releases electrons + - gamma-Rays Light Scintillation Crystal Photocathode PM Tube Dynodes

16 Photomultiplier Tubes
Electrons attracted to series of dynodes each dynode slightly more positive than last one + + + - + + gamma-Rays Light Scintillation Crystal Photocathode PM Tube Dynodes

17 Gamma camera Data acquisition
Static Dynamic ECG-gated Wholebody scanning Tomography ECG-gated tomography Wholebody tomography

18 Scintigraphy seeks to determine the distribution of a radiopharmaceutical
There are methods to change the radionuclide distribution. In this case (examination of the myocaedium using Tc99 sestamibi) the uptake in the liver and emptying of the gallbladder can be stimulated by giving the patient a fatty meal.

19 SPECT cameras are used to determine the three-dimensional distribution of the radiotracer

20 Tomographic acquisition

21 Tomographic planes The image can be used to illustrate that gammacamera tomography is imaging of a volume where slices can be displayed in any plane.

22 Myocardial scintigraphy
This is an example of a surface rendered image combined with the information in the coronal slices. The patient has an iscemic heart disease.

23 ECG GATED TOMOGRAPHY This is an animated image and shows the information in three tomographic planes as well as a surface rendered image to illustrate wall motion.

24 12.2 Image Quality & Camera QA

25 Factors affecting image formation
Distribution of radiopharmaceutical Collimator selection and sensitivity Spatial resolution Energy resolution Uniformity Count rate performance Spatial positioning at different energies Center of rotation Scattered radiation Attenuation Noise

26 SPATIAL RESOLUTION Sum of intrinsic resolution and the collimator resolution Intrinsic resolution depends on the positioning of the scintillation events (detector thickness, number of PM-tubes, photon energy) Collimator resolution depends on the collimator geometry (size, shape and length of the holes)

27 SPATIAL RESOLUTION Object Image Intensity

28 NON-UNIFORMITY (Contamination of collimator)
The image to the right is aquired after cleaning of the collimator (Contamination of collimator)

29 NON UNIFORMITY RING ARTIFACTS
Good uniformity Bad uniformity The lower image is the absolute difference between the upper two images. It clearly shows the ring artifacts. Difference

30 NON-UNIFORMITY Defect collimator
The images in the lower row are acquired using a collimator with 50% lower sensitivity in an 1cm3 area in the center of the field of view. The images in the upper row are from the same patient acquired with a good collimator. It is important to point out the risk of false positive results if the camera is not working perfectly, Defect collimator

31 Scattered radiation Scattered photon photon electron
Remember that compton scattering is the dominating process in the attenuation of photons in soft tissue. photon electron

32 The amount of scattered photons registered
Depends on 1- Patient size 2- Energy resolution of the gammacamera 3- Window setting

33 PATIENT SIZE In the case of a big patient some of the full energy photons that should have reached the gamma camera will be scattered in the patient. The relation scattered/full energy photons will increase with the volume of the patient.

34 Pulse height distribution
Energy Counts 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 Tc99m Full energy peak Scattered photons The width of the full energy peak (FWHM) is determined by the energy resolution of the gamma camera. There will be an overlap between the scattered photon distribution and the full energy peak, meaning that some scattered photons will be registered. FWHM Overlapping area

35 Window width 20% 40% 10% The image can be used to discuss the optimum relation between sensitivity and image quality. Increased window width will result in an increased number of registered scattered photons and hence a decrease in contrast

36 ATTENUATION CORRECTION
Transmission measurements Sealed source CT

37 ATTENUATION CORRECTION
Ficaro et al Circulation 93: , 1996

38 NOISE Count density

39 Gamma camera Operational considerations Collimator selection
Collimator mounting Distance collimator-patient Uniformity Energy window setting Corrections (attenuation, scatter) Background Recording system Type of examination

40 QC GAMMA CAMERA Acceptance Daily Weekly Yearly Uniformity P T T P
Uniformity, tomography P P Spectrum display P T T P Energy resolution P P Sensitivity P T P Pixel size P T P Center of rotation P T P Linearity P P Resolution P P Count losses P P Multiple window pos P P Total performance phantom P P P: physicist, T:technician

41 Sensitivity Expressed as counts/min/MBq and should be measured for each collimator Important to observe with multi-head systems that variations among heads do not exceed 3%

42 Multiple Window Spatial Registration
Performed to verify that contrast is satisfactory for imaging radionuclides, which emit photons of more than one energy (e.g. Tl-201, Ga-67, In-111, etc.) as well as in dual radionuclides studies

43 Count Rate Performance
Performed to ensure that the time to process an event is sufficient to maintain spatial resolution and uniformity in clinical images acquired at high-count rates

44 Total performance Total performance phantom. Emission or transmission.
Compare result with reference image.

45 Phantoms for QC of gamma cameras
Bar phantom Slit phantom Orthogonal hole phantom Total performance phantom

46 QUALITY CONTROL ANALOGUE IMAGES
Quality control of film processing: base & fog, sensitivity, contrast

47 QUALITY ASSURANCE COMPUTER EVALUATION
Efficient use of computers can increase the sensitivity and specificity of an examination. * software based on published and clinically tested methods * well documented algorithms * user manuals * training * software phantoms

48 SPECT/CT System

49 TYPICAL SPECT/CT CONFIGURATION
The most prevalent form of SPECT/CT scanner involves a dual-detector SPECT camera with a 1-slice or 4-slice CT unit mounted to the rotating gantry; 64-slice CT for SPECT/CT also available

50 SPECT/CT Accurate registration CT data used for attenuation correction
Localization of abnormalities Parathyroid lesions (especially for ectopic lesions) Bone vs soft tissue infections CTCA fused with myocardial perfusion for 64-slice CT scanners

51 The CT Scanner X ray tube X ray emission in all directions collimators

52 A look inside a rotate/rotate CT
Detector Array and Collimator X Ray Tube

53 A Look Inside a Slip Ring CT
Note: how most of the electronics is placed on the rotating gantry X Ray Tube Detector Array Slip Ring

54 What are we measuring in a CT scanner?
We are measuring the average linear attenuation coefficient µ between tube and detectors The attenuation coefficient reflects how the x ray intensity is reduced by a material

55 Conversion of  to CT number
Distribution of  values initially measured  values are scaled to that of water to give the CT number

56 Nuclear medicine application according to type of radionuclide
Diagnostics Therapy Pure  emitter  () e.g. ; Tc99m, In111, Ga67, I123 Positron emitters (ß+)   e.g. : F-18 , ß- emitters   e.g. : I131, Sm153 Pure ß- emitters   e.g. : Sr89, Y90, Er169  emitters   e.g. : At211, Bi213

57 RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS
Radiopharmaceuticals used in nuclear medicine can be classified as follows: ready-to-use radiopharmaceuticals e.g. 131I- MIBG, 131I-iodide, 201Tl-chloride, 111In- DTPA instant kits for preparation of products e.g. 99mTc-MDP, 99mTc-MAA, 99mTc-HIDA, 111In-Octreotide kits requiring heating e.g. 99mTc-MAG3, 99mTc-MIBI products requiring significant manipulation e.g. labelling of blood cells, synthesis and labelling of radiopharmaceuticals produced in house

58 Radionuclide used with SPECT
99mTc - Technetium

59 99Mo-99mTc GENERATOR 87.6% 99Mo 99mTc  140 keV T½ = 6.02 h 12.4%
Technetium-99m is a metastable nuclear isomer of technetium-99, symbolized as 99mTc. The "m" indicates that this is a metastable nuclear isomer 87.6% 99Mo 99mTc Molybdenum 99  140 keV T½ = 6.02 h 12.4% ß- 442 keV  739 keV T½ = 2.75 d 99Tc ß- 292 keV T½ = 2*105 y 99Ru stable

60 Technetium generator Mo-99 Tc-99m Tc-99 NaCl AlO2 Mo-99 +Tc-99m Tc-99m
66 h h NaCl AlO2 Mo-99 +Tc-99m Tc-99m

61 Technetium generator Note that there different types of generators. This illustrates a dry type with a separate container of saline solution that is changed every time a new elution will be made. In the wet type of generator there is a built in container with enough volume of saline solution for all elutions

62 Technetium generator This is a closer look at the top of the generator with the needles where the elution vial and the saline solution vial are placed

63 Radiopharmaceuticals
Radionuclide Pharmaceutical Organ Parameter + colloid Liver RES Tc-99m MAA Lungs Regional perfusion + DTPA Kidneys Kidney function The image can be used for a short explanation of a radiopharmaceutical. The same radioactive substance can be used in labeling of different compunds resulting in radiopharmaceuticals with different properties

64 Laboratory work with radionuclides

65 Administration of radiopharmaceuticals

66 SUMMARY OF SPET/CT SPECT cameras are scintillation cameras, also called gamma cameras, which image one gamma ray at a time, with optimum detection at 140 KeV, ideal for gamma rays emitted by Tc-99m SPECT cameras rotate about the patient in order to determine the three-dimensional distribution of radiotracer in the patient SPECT/CT scanners have a CT scanner immediately adjacent to the SPECT camera, enabling accurate registration of the SPECT scan with the CT scan, enabling attenuation correction of the SPECT scan by the CT scan and anatomical localization of areas of unusually high activity revealed by the SPECT scan

67 SPECT/CT CLINICAL ALLPLICATIONS
Refer to the pdf file included with this lecture (spect-appl-L8)


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