A NEW APPARATUS FOR BRAIN IMAGING - 4-HEAD ROTATING GAMMA-CAMERA SINGLE-PHOTON EMISSION COMPUTED TOMOGRAPH
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 31 (5) , 603-609
Abstract
The development of a new rotating gamma camera SPECT device for imaging the brain was undertaken with the objective of achieving the highest full volume imaging spatial and temporal resolution performance. For this purpose, four retangular gamma camera detectors were arranged as close to the head as possible, and united in a block to insure detector head registration and alignment as well as to enable rotation stability at high speeds. Phantom and clinical studies performed demonstrated 42 sequential, 4-mm thick transaxial images acquired in one scan and with sufficient volume to permit the entire cerebrum and cerebellum to be imaged with high sensitivity. The central field of view reconstructed spatial resolution measured 7.0 mm full width of half maximum utilizing the high-resolution collimator, and tomographic images of arbitrary planes including sagittal and coronal demonstrated equally high resolution. The high sensitivity and high speed rotational acquisition capability of the device permits dynamic SPECT studies to be carried out in the analysis of rapidly varying radiotracer concentrations.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- A SPECIAL CUTOFFS GAMMA-CAMERA FOR HIGH-RESOLUTION SPECT OF THE HEAD1984
- HEADTOMEJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1981
- A Single Photon Dynamic Computer Assisted Tomograph (DCAT) for Imaging Brain Function in Multiple Cross SectionsJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1980
- The Mark IV System for Radionuclide Computed Tomography of the BrainRadiology, 1976