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First published online June 13, 2008, 10.2967/jnumed.107.049791
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Journal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 49 No. 7 1132-1140
© 2008 by Society of Nuclear Medicine

doi: 10.2967/jnumed.107.049791

Basic Science Investigation

A Prototype PET Scanner with DOI-Encoding Detectors

Yongfeng Yang1, Yibao Wu1, Jinyi Qi1, Sara St. James1, Huini Du1, Purushottam A. Dokhale2, Kanai S. Shah2, Richard Farrell2 and Simon R. Cherry1

1 Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California-Davis, Davis, California; and 2 Radiation Monitoring Devices Inc., Watertown, Massachusetts

Correspondence: For correspondence or reprints contact: Yongfeng Yang, Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California-Davis, 451 E. Health Sciences Dr., Davis, CA 95616. E-mail: yfyang{at}ucdavis.edu

Detectors with depth-encoding allow a PET scanner to simultaneously achieve high sensitivity and high spatial resolution. Methods: A prototype PET scanner, consisting of depth-encoding detectors constructed by dual-ended readout of lutetium oxyorthosilicate (LSO) arrays with 2 position-sensitive avalanche photodiodes (PSAPDs), was developed. The scanner comprised 2 detector plates, each with 4 detector modules, and the LSO arrays consisted of 7 x 7 elements, with a crystal size of 0.9225 x 0.9225 x 20 mm and a pitch of 1.0 mm. The active area of the PSAPDs was 8 x 8 mm. The performance of individual detector modules was characterized. A line-source phantom and a hot-rod phantom were imaged on the prototype scanner in 2 different scanner configurations. The images were reconstructed using 20, 10, 5, 2, and 1 depth-of-interaction (DOI) bins to demonstrate the effects of DOI resolution on reconstructed image resolution and visual image quality. Results: The flood histograms measured from the sum of both PSAPD signals were only weakly depth-dependent, and excellent crystal identification was obtained at all depths. The flood histograms improved as the detector temperature decreased. DOI resolution and energy resolution improved significantly as the temperature decreased from 20°C to 10°C but improved only slightly with a subsequent temperature decrease to 0°C. A full width at half maximum (FWHM) DOI resolution of 2 mm and an FWHM energy resolution of 15% were obtained at a temperature of 10°C. Phantom studies showed that DOI measurements significantly improved the reconstructed image resolution. In the first scanner configuration (parallel detector planes), the image resolution at the center of the field of view was 0.9-mm FWHM with 20 DOI bins and 1.6-mm FWHM with 1 DOI bin. In the second scanner configuration (detector planes at a 40° angle), the image resolution at the center of the field of view was 1.0-mm FWHM with 20 DOI bins and was not measurable when using only 1 bin. Conclusion: PET scanners based on this detector design offer the prospect of high and uniform spatial resolution (crystal size, ~1 mm; DOI resolution, ~2 mm), high sensitivity (20-mm-thick detectors), and compact size (DOI encoding permits detectors to be tightly packed around the subject and minimizes number of detectors needed).

Key Words: small-animal PET • depth of interaction • position-sensitive avalanche photodiode • instrumentation

COPYRIGHT © 2008 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine, Inc.


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