6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1267980
RESEARCH PRODUCT
UTSW Small Animal Positron Emission Imager
Ralph P. MasonOrhan K. ÖZPadmakar V KulkarniEdmond RicherP.e. ThorpeJon A. AndersonRoderick W MccollNikolai V SlavineS. SeliounineGary ArbiqueMarc JenneweinS.c. SrivastavaE. TsyganovFrank RöschA. ZinchenkoAnca ConstantinescuRobert W. ParkeyPeter P. Antichsubject
PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsPhotomultiplierScintillationOptical fiberPhotonbusiness.industryDetectorIterative reconstructionPhotocathodelaw.inventionOpticsNuclear Energy and EngineeringlawElectrical and Electronic EngineeringbusinessImage resolutiondescription
A Small Animal Imager (SAI) for PET has been designed, built, tested in phantoms, and applied to investigations in mice and rats. The device uses principles based on gamma-ray induced scintillation in crossed fiber optic detectors connected to Position Sensitive Photomultiplier Tubes (PSPMT). Each detector consists of an epoxied stack of 28 layers of 135 round 1 mm BCF-10 scintillating plastic fibers. The overlap region forms a 13.5times13.5times2.8 cm3 detector volume. Scintillating light from the fibers is detected by two (X and Y directions) Hamamatsu R-2486 PSPMTs with 16 anode wires in each of two orthogonal directions. A centroid-finding algorithm gives the position of a light cluster on the face (photocathode) of a PSPMT. The accuracy of the reconstruction of an interaction position is essentially independent of light cluster position. This translates to a nearly isotropic photon response for the entire detector. The system has been used to test several 3D image reconstruction algorithms, software modifications, and improvements. The sensitivity (~12.6 cps/kBq at 9 cm inner diameter) and sub-millimeter spatial resolution (better than 1 mm in phantoms) obtained with an iterative algorithm incorporating system modeling make the SAI a relatively inexpensive high performance animal imager. The SAI is currently being used for imaging experiments in mice and rats
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2006-10-01 | IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science |