Physics in medicine and biology | 2019

Count rate performance of brain-dedicated PET scanners: a Monte Carlo simulation study.

 
 

Abstract


In recent years, there has been a renewed interest in brain-dedicated PET imaging systems, particularly in the context of combined PET/MR imaging. We are currently designing a brain-dedicated PET insert suitable for an ultra-high field brain-dedicated MR scanner, the Siemens Magnetom 7T MR scanner. In this paper, an investigation on the count rate performance of several possible detectors through a series of Monte Carlo simulations is reported. Brain-dedicated PET scanners with a lutetium oxyorthosilicate scintillator and a detector area of 0.04 (1 crystal per detector) to 101.37 (2500 crystals per detector) cm2, detector thickness of 10 to 20 mm and a fixed crystal pitch of ~2 mm were simulated. The count rate performance of each scanner was evaluated as a function of detector deadtime type and constant, coincidence timing window and lower level discriminator. Also, the effects of activity outside the field-of-view (FOV) on the count rate performance of each scanner were studied. For each detector geometry and performance metric, the scanner singles rate, scanner sensitivity and noise equivalent count rate as a function of activity in the FOV were measured. It was seen that scanners with detectors comprised a few crystal elements showed reduced scanner sensitivity due to a high number of inter-detector scattering. The count rate performance of scanners with large detectors, on the other hand, was mainly determined by the deadtime properties of the detectors. A model for the count rate performance of the scanner with each studied detector is presented in this work.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1088/1361-6560/ab452f
Language English
Journal Physics in medicine and biology

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