Title: Topic 8' Gamma Camera II
1Topic 8. Gamma Camera (II)
- Basic Performance Characteristics
- Detector Limitations
- Design and Performance Characteristics of
Parallel-Hole Collimators - Performance Characteristics of Converging,
Diverging, and Pinhole Collimators - Measurements of Gamma Camera Performance.
2Intrinsic Spatial Resolution Limits
- Intrinsic spatial resolution refers to the limit
of spatial resolution achievable by the detector
and the electronics - Intrinsic spatial resolution is limited primarily
by two factors multiple scattering and
statistical fluctuation in the distribution of
light photons (the later is the main factor). - Intrinsic resolution depends on detector crystal
thickness and ? ray energy. A thinner crystal is
used for Anger camera to achieve better spatial
resolution. - Larger number of PM tubes and improvement of
light collection efficiency result in better
resolution.
3Intrinsic Resolution vs Photon Energy
4Intrinsic Resolution vs Crystal Thickness
5(No Transcript)
6Detection Efficiency
- The crystal thickness of NaI(Tl) in Anger camera
is smaller (6-12mm) than that of a well counter
(2-5cm). - Anger camera is designed for optimal detection of
? ray energies of 100-200keV.
7(No Transcript)
8Energy Resolution
9Problems at High Counting Rates
- Pulse pile-up is the problem at high count rate
and it results in count loss and image
distortion. - Count loss depends on the whole energy spectrum
but the apparent dead-time depends on the window
fraction. Scatter causes narrower of the window
fraction therefore longer dead-time.
10(No Transcript)
11Problems at High Counting Rates
- Pulse pile-up causes image distortion. Two
scattered event may be added to form a photo-peak
which produces a location between the two
scattered events.
12Problems at High Counting Rates
- The general effect of the pulse pile-up is to
cause a loss of image contrast and details
13Problems at High Counting Rates
- Pulse pile-up rejection circuit can be used to
improve the pulse pile-up but it will reduce the
maximum achievable count rate - Deadtime can be improved by shortening the
effective charge integration time for the output
signal from the PM tube but it will reduce the
amount of light collected by the PM tube,
therefore, degrade the intrinsic resolution.
14Problems at High Counting Rates
- Count rate performance should be one of the
important factors for Anger cameras
15Pulse Pile-up Correction
16Image Non-Linearity
- Non-linearity refers to that a straight line
object appear as curved line image - Non-linearity occurs when the X and Y positional
signals do not change linearly with the
displacement distance. - Pincushion distortion is an inward bowing
image and Barrel distortion is an outward
bowing image - A PM tube may have high light collection
efficiency in the centre which may result in a
pincushion in the centre and barrel between
PM tubes. This kind of images could results in a
wavy line pattern.
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19Nonlinearity Example
20Image Non-Uniformity
- Non-Uniformity refers to the intensity variation
from a uniform flood source - The causes could be the non-uniform detection
efficiency (small differences in pulse height
spectrum) and non-linearity of PM tubes (more
server) or instrument malfunctions. - Edge packing refers to the bright ring around
the edge of the image. It is caused by the
internal light reflection of the detector
crystal. Edge packing is usually masked and the
useful field of view is smaller than the actual
detector size
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24Non-Uniformity Correction Techniques
- Cosmetic approach
- Adjust individual PM tube gains (compensate for
the detection efficiency difference) - Correction factors matrix. Test image is
normalised and the correction factor for each
matrix element is used to add or subtract from
the image. - Advanced approach
- A set of microprocessors are used to store
correction matrices for regional differences in
pulse height spectra and for position distortion.
- Images are corrected on event by event basis (on
fly).
25Non-uniformity Correction Example
26Uniformity Profiles
27Gamma Camera Tuning
28Design and Performance Characteristics of
Parallel Hole Collimators
- Basic limitations in collimator performance
- Septal thickness
- Geometry of collimator holes
- System resolution
29Basic Limitation in Collimator Performance
- Collimator is a limiting factor in camera system
performance. - Collimator resolution refers to the sharpness or
details of the ? ray image projected onto the
detector --- worse than the intrinsic resolution. - Collimator efficiency refers to the fraction of ?
rays that pass through it -- a few percent or
less.
30Septal Thickness
- Septal thickness is designed to prevent ? rays
from penetrating from one hole to another (allow
less than 5 to pass through). - Septal thickness should be as small as possible
in order to gain maximum efficiency - High atomic number and density material should be
used (lead is the choice)
31Septal Thickness
- The required thickness t2dw/(l-w) where
(t/w)(2dt)/l if ? is small - If 5 penetration is allowed,
tgt6d/µ/l-(3/ µ) because e-µwlt0.05 therefore
µwgt3
32General Comments
- The septal thickness depends on the ? ray
energies to be used because µ depends on the ?
ray energy. - Energy ranges in nuclear medicine are often
classified as low energy lt150keV medium energy
lt400keV and high energy lt1Mev. - Low energy collimators are generally fragile
because they are only a few tenth of mm. - Low energy collimators are used whenever possible
to obtain maximum collimator efficiency (foggy
background may be superimposed on the image for
high energy).
33Geometry of Collimator Holes
- The performance of a collimator is affected by
its shape, length and diameter (round or
hexagonal are the best) - Spatial resolution and detection efficiency are
the two important performance parameters - Collimator spatial resolution is defined as the
FWHM of the radiation profile from a point or
line source of radiation projected by the
collimator onto the detector.
34Collimator Resolution
- A parallel holes collimator resolution is given
by Rcd(leb)/le where le l-2µ-1 is the
effective collimator length (taking into account
of the ? ray penetration)
35Collimator Resolution (2)
- Spatial resolution of a parallel collimator
increases (worse) as the distance between the
collimator and the source increased
36Collimator Efficiency
- The detection efficiency is given by
gK2(d/le)2d2/(dt)2
where K is a constant that depends on the holes
shape. The first part is the geometric factor
(solid angle subtended by a collimator hole) and
the second part is the fraction that is not
covered by the septa (the area ratio of the holes
and total detector).
37Collimator Efficiency
- Collimator efficiency for a source in air is
independent of source-to-collimator distance b.
38Collimator Efficiency
- Invariance of collimator efficiency with source
to collimator distance applies to point sources,
line sources and uniform sheet source in air with
parallel hole collimators.
39Resolution and Efficiency
- The relationship between the resolution and
efficiency is gRc2 - For a given septal thickness, collimator
resolution is improved only at the expense of
decreased collimator efficiency and vice versa.
40(No Transcript)
41System Resolution
- System resolution depends on a number of factors
such as, scattering, septal penetration,
intrinsic resolution and collimator resolution
with the collimator and intrinsic resolutions are
the main factors. - System resolution (consider intrinsic and
collimator only) can be expressed as Rs2Ri2Rc2 - System resolution is determined primarily by
collimator resolution.
42(No Transcript)
43Performance Characteristics of Converging,
Diverging and Pinhole Collimators
44Performance Characteristics of Converging
Collimator
45Performance Characteristics of Diverging
Collimator
46Performance Characteristics of Pinhole Collimator
47Performance Characteristics of Converging,
Diverging and Pinhole Collimators
48Some Comments
- Resolution always is best with the source as
close as possible to the collimator - For point source in air, the efficiency increases
as the source to collimator distance increase
with converging collimator (maximum at focus
point) and decreases for diverging and pinhole
collimators. No change for flood source as long
as the source cover the entire detector. - Diverging, converging and pinhole collimators may
be useful for the change of field of view but the
image distortion caused by the magnification with
depth may be a problem.
49(No Transcript)
50Measurements of Gamma Camera Performance
- Intrinsic Resolution
- System Resolution
- Spatial Linearity
- Uniformity
- Counting Rate Performance
- Energy Resolution
- System Sensitivity