Research ArticleSpecial Contribution
How to Detect and Avoid Myocardial Perfusion SPECT Artifacts
E. Gordon DePuey
Journal of Nuclear Medicine April 1994, 35 (4) 699-702;


This is a PDF-only article. The first page of the PDF of this article appears above.
In this issue
How to Detect and Avoid Myocardial Perfusion SPECT Artifacts
E. Gordon DePuey
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Apr 1994, 35 (4) 699-702;
Jump to section
Related Articles
- No related articles found.
Cited By...
- Vasodilator Stress Perfusion CMR Imaging Is Feasible and Prognostic in Obese Patients
- An Investigation of a Sinogram Discontinuity Artifact on Myocardial Perfusion Imaging
- Motion-Frozen Myocardial Perfusion SPECT Improves Detection of Coronary Artery Disease in Obese Patients
- A Physiologic Approach to Decreasing Upward Creep of the Heart During Myocardial Perfusion Imaging
- Combined Supine and Prone Quantitative Myocardial Perfusion SPECT: Method Development and Clinical Validation in Patients with No Known Coronary Artery Disease
- Prone Versus Supine Patient Positioning During Gated 99mTc-Sestamibi SPECT: Effect on Left Ventricular Volumes, Ejection Fraction, and Heart Rate
- Prognostic Implications of Combined Prone and Supine Acquisitions in Patients with Equivocal or Abnormal Supine Myocardial Perfusion SPECT
- Effect of Acquisition Orbit on SPECT in Phantoms
- Poststress Motionlike Artifacts Caused by the Use of a Dual-Head Gamma Camera for 201Tl Myocardial SPECT
- Brain SPECT Artifacts in Patients Having Metallic Cranioplasty
- Clinical Impact of Combination of Scatter, Attenuation Correction, and Depth-Dependent Resolution Recovery for 201Tl Studies
- Technical Aspects of Myocardial SPECT Imaging
- American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Clinical Competence Statement on Stress Testing : A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association/American College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine Task Force on Clinical Competence
- American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association clinical competence statement on stress testing: A report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association/American College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine Task Force on Clinical Competence
- Multicenter Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Correction for Photon Attenuation and Scatter in SPECT Myocardial Perfusion Imaging