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Article Abstract

Purpose: Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) scanners using cadmium zinc telluride (CZT) offer compact, lightweight, and improved imaging capability over conventional NaI(Tl)-based SPECT scanners. The main purpose in this study is to propose a full-ring SPECT system design with eight large-area CZT detectors that can be used for a broad spectrum of SPECT radiopharmaceuticals and demonstrate the performance of our system in comparison to the reference conventional NaI(Tl)-based two-head Anger cameras.

Methods: A newly designed full-ring SPECT system is composed of eight large-area CZT cameras (128 mm × 179.2 mm effective area) that can be independently swiveled around their own axes of rotation independently and can have radial motion for varying aperture sizes that can be adapted to different sizes of imaging volume. Extended projection data were generated by conjoining projections of two adjacent detectors to overcome the limited field-of-view (FOV) by each CZT camera. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we evaluated this new system design with digital phantoms including a Derenzo hot rod phantom and a Zubal brain phantom. Comparison of performance metrics such as spatial resolution, sensitivity, contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), and contrast-recovery ratio was made between our design and conventional SPECT scanners having different pixel sizes and radii of rotation (one clinically well-known type and two arbitrary types matched to our proposed CZT-SPECT geometries).

Results: The proposed scanner could result in up to about three times faster in acquisition time over conventional scan time at same acquisition time per step. The spatial resolution improvement, or deterioration, of our proposed scanner compared to the clinical-type scanner was dependent upon the location of the point source. However, there were overall performance improvements over the three different setups of the conventional scanner particularly in volume sensitivity (approximately up to 1.7 times). Overall, we successfully reconstructed the phantom image for both Tc-based perfusion and I-based dopamine transporter (DaT) brain studies simulated for our new design. In particular, the striatal/background contrast-recovery ratio in 3-to-1 reference ratio was over 0.8 for the I-based DaT study.

Conclusions: We proposed a variable-aperture full-ring SPECT system using combined pixelated CZT and energy-optimized parallel-hole collimator modules and evaluated the performance of this scanner using relevant digital phantoms and MC simulations. Our studies demonstrated the potential of our new full-ring CZT-SPECT design, showing reduced acquisition time and improved sensitivity with acceptable CNR and spatial resolution.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8141019PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mp.14836DOI Listing

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New Generation SPECT Cameras Based on Cadmium-Zinc Telluriide Technology.

Ann Nucl Cardiol

October 2024

Division of Nuclear Medicine, Department of Radiology, Saitama Medical University Hospital, Saitama, Japan.

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  • Despite advances in positron emission tomography, cardiac SPECT imaging remains popular due to its accessibility and widespread clinical application.
  • CZT-based detectors offer improved imaging capabilities compared to traditional Anger type detectors, leading to successful clinical use since their introduction 15 years ago.
  • Ongoing research into new semiconductor materials and the development of advanced SPECT systems indicate potential future advancements in nuclear cardiology.
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