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The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 40 No. 3 442-447
© 1999 by Society of Nuclear Medicine
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Frequency Encoding for Simultaneous Display of Multimodality Images

Mario Quarantelli, Bruno Alfano, Michele Larobina, Enrico Tedeschi, Arturo Brunetti, Eugenio M. Covelli, Andrea Ciarmiello, Ciro Mainolfi and Marco Salvatore

National Council of Research, Center for Nuclear Medicine, Naples
Department of Biomorphological and Functional Sciences, University Federico II, Naples
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Fondazione G. Pascale, Naples, Italy

Correspondence: For correspondence or reprints contact: Mario Quarantelli, MD, Centro CNR per la Medicina Nucleare, Via Pansini 5, 80131 Napoli, Italy.

ABSTRACT

An original method for simultaneous display of functional and anatomic images, based on frequency encoding (FE), merges color PET with T1-weighted MR brain images, and grayscale PET with multispectral color MR images. A comparison with two other methods reported in the literature for image fusion (averaging and intensity modulation techniques) was performed. Methods: For FE, the Fourier transform of the merged image was obtained summing the low frequencies of the PET image and the high frequencies of the MR image. For image averaging, the merged image was obtained as a weighted average of the intensities of the two images to be merged. For intensity modulation, the red, green and blue components of the color image were multiplied on a pixel-by-pixel basis by the grayscale image. A comparison of the performances of the three techniques was made by three independent observers assessing the conspicuity of specific MRI and PET information in the merged images. For evaluation purposes, images from seven patients and a computer-simulated MRI/PET phantom were used. Data were compared with a chi-square test applied to ranks. Results: For the depiction of MRI and PET information when merging color PET and T1-weighted MR images, FE was rated superior to intensity modulation and averaging techniques in a significant number of comparisons. For merging grayscale PET with multispectral color MR images, FE and intensity modulation were rated superior to image averaging in terms of both MRI and PET information. Conclusion: The data suggest that improved simultaneous evaluation of MRI and PET information can be achieved with a method based on FE.

Key Words: brain • radionuclide studies • MRI • image display • image processing • PET




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M. Quarantelli, K. Berkouk, A. Prinster, B. Landeau, C. Svarer, L. Balkay, B. Alfano, A. Brunetti, J.-C. Baron, and M. Salvatore
Integrated Software for the Analysis of Brain PET/SPECT Studies with Partial-Volume-Effect Correction
J. Nucl. Med., February 1, 2004; 45(2): 192 - 201.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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