High-resolution motion compensation for brain PET imaging using real-time electromagnetic motion tracking.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
BACKGROUND: Substantial improvements in spatial resolution in brain positron emission tomography (PET) scanners have greatly reduced partial volume effect, making head movement the main source of image blur. To achieve high-resolution PET neuroimaging, precise real-time estimation of both head position and orientation is essential for accurate motion compensation. PURPOSE: A high-resolution electromagnetic motion tracking (EMMT) system with an event-by-event motion correction is developed for PET-CT scanners. METHODS: EMMT is comprised of a source, an array of sensors, and a readout electronic unit (REU). The source acts as a transmitter and emits an EM dipole field. It is placed in close proximity to the sensor array and detects changes in EM flux density due to sensor movement. The REU digitizes signals from each sensor and captures precise rotational and translational movements in real time. Tracked motion in the EMMT coordinate system is synchronized with the PET list-mode data and transformed into the scanner coordinate system by locating paired positions in both systems. The optimal rigid motion is estimated using singular value decomposition. The rigid motion and depth-of-interaction (DOI) parallax effect are corrected by event-by-event rebinning of mispositioned lines-of-response (LORs). We integrated the EMMT with our recently developed ultra-high resolution Prism-PET prototype brain scanner and a commercial Siemens Biograph mCT PET-CT scanner. We assessed the imaging performance of the Prism-PET/EMMT system using multi-frame motion of point sources and phantoms. The mCT/EMMT system was validated using a set of point sources attached to both a mannequin head and a human volunteer, for simulating multiframe and continuous motions, respectively. Additionally, a human subject for [18F]MK6240 PET imaging was included. RESULTS: null CONCLUSIONS: The proposed EMMT system is a cost-effective, high frame-rate, and none-line-of-sight alternative to infrared camera-based tracking systems and is capable of achieving high rotational and translational tracking accuracies for mitigating motion-induced blur in high-resolution brain dedicated PET scanners.