Quantification of partial volume effects in planar imaging

Authors

  • Enoch Sithole Department of Physics, Faculty of Pre-Clinical Sciences, SMU, Pretoria, South Africa
  • Mpumelelo Nyathi Department of Medical Physics, Faculty of Health Sciences, SMU, Pretoria, South Africa
  • Ouma Ramafi Department of Nuclear Medicine, Dr. George Mukhari Academic Hospital, Pretoria, South Africa
Abstract:

Introduction: The limited resolution of the imaging system causes partial volume effects (PVEs). These results in spreading of image counts to the neighboring pixels. This phenomenon is called spill-out effect. This study aimed at quantifying PVEs using ImageJ. Methods:Technetium-99m solution of concentration of 74 kBq/ml was filled into spheres A, B and C of diameters: 26 mm, 20 mm and 16 mm respectively. The spheres were imaged mounted inside a Jaszczak phantom filled with activity free water using a Siemens E-Cam dual head gamma camera. Images were quantified using ImageJ following a two-step method. Step 1: Drawing of region of interest 1 (ROI 1) closely on the boundary of the planar image to extract images counts before PVEs correction. Step 2: Drawing region of interest 2 (ROI 2) to extract true sphere image counts. ROI 2 extends from the boundary of ROI 1 by the FWHM of the imaging system. Results:The studyrevealed that PVEs are aggravated by decrease in sphere size. Underestimation of image counts on the 64 × 64 pixels matrix was found to be: 9.7%; 15% and 26% in the order of decreasing sphere size. However, an improvement in the spatial resolution decreased PVEs (128 × 128 pixels: 6.7%; 12.0% and 22.5%; 256 × 256 pixels: 6.5% ; 9% and 19.3%; 256 × 256 pixels: 6.1%; 8.0% and 18.7% in the order of decreasing sphere size). Conclusion: ImageJ successfully quantified PVEs attributed to the spill-out effect in planar imaging.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

quantification of partial volume effects in planar imaging

introduction: the limited resolution of the imaging system causes partial volume effects (pves). these results in spreading of image counts to the neighboring pixels. this phenomenon is called spill-out effect. this study aimed at quantifying pves using imagej. methods:technetium-99m solution of concentration of 74 kbq/ml was filled into spheres a, b and c of diameters: 26 mm, 20 mm and 16 mm r...

full text

Quantification of Partial Volume Effects in Salivary Glands SPECT Images after Radiation Therapy of Head and Neck Tumors

Introduction: Radical radiation therapy of head and neck cancers may injure the salivary glands and reduce their function. Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) images maybe used to evaluate function post-therapy. However, accurate quantification is hindered by the partial volume effects (PVEs). The present study involved the introduction of a PVEs quantif...

full text

Effect of scatter coincidences, partial volume, positron range and non-colinearity on the quantification of FDOPA Patlak analysis

Introduction: The key characteristics of positron emission tomography (PET) are its quantitative capability and its sensitivity, which allow the in vivo imaging of biochemical interactions with small amounts of tracer concentrations. Therefore, accurate quantification is important. However, it can be sensitive to several physical factors. The aim of this investigation is the assessment of the e...

full text

Partial-volume effect in PET tumor imaging.

PET has the invaluable advantage of being intrinsically quantitative, enabling accurate measurements of tracer concentrations in vivo. In PET tumor imaging, indices characterizing tumor uptake, such as standardized uptake values, are becoming increasingly important, especially in the context of monitoring the response to therapy. However, when tracer uptake in small tumors is measured, large bi...

full text

Improved Quantification of Cerebral Vein Oxygenation Using Partial Volume Correction

Purpose: Quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) enables cerebral venous characterization and physiological measurements, such as oxygen extraction fraction (OEF). The exquisite sensitivity of QSM to deoxygenated blood makes it possible to image small veins; however partial volume effects must be addressed for accurate quantification. We present a new method, Iterative Cylindrical Fitting (IC...

full text

Comparison of Partial Volume Effects in Arterial and Venous Contrast Curves in CT Brain Perfusion Imaging

PURPOSE In brain CT perfusion (CTP), the arterial contrast bolus is scaled to have the same area under the curve (AUC) as the venous outflow to correct for partial volume effects (PVE). This scaling is based on the assumption that large veins are unaffected by PVE. Measurement of the internal carotid artery (ICA), usually unaffected by PVE due to its large diameter, may avoid the need for parti...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 24  issue 2

pages  115- 120

publication date 2016-07-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023