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Featured researches published by Masanobu Sato.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2012

PET data acquisition (DAQ) system having scalability for the number of detector

Masayuki Nakazawa; Junichi Ohi; Tetsuo Furumiya; Tomoaki Tsuda; Masafumi Furuta; Masanobu Sato; Keishi Kitamura

In a conventional PET data acquisition (DAQ) system, all detector signals are transferred to and processed by a single coincidence module so that high data processing speed is generally required for it. In other words, scale of a PET system (number of detector modules) was greatly limited by the performance of the coincidence module. In this situation, we developed a new DAQ system having scalability for the number of detector modules. Therefore, the new DAQ system can be applied widely for a small-scale system to a large-scale clinical system. The DAQ system was designed aiming for connecting 256 PET detector modules in maximum and for connecting multiple coincidence modules to form a daisy-chain structure transferring the detector signals to each other. The DAQ system consists of the three modules: one for generating data of position, energy and timing by processing detection pulse signals digitally, one for judging coincidence and generating coincidence event data and one for connecting the coincidence modules and a console Pc. This structure separates paths of single event data and coincidence event data and realizes that the transmission load between coincidence modules can be reduced. We confirmed using Matlab/Simulink that the count loss of coincidence events in the proposed DAQ system was only 5.5 % at the total coincidence count rate of 30 Mcps/system. We also measured the timing jitter of the DAQ system and the result was 97 ps. These results indicate that the DAQ system significantly reduces coincidence count losses and provides the timing performance enough for TOF-PET scanners.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2010

Development of a prototype DOI-TOF-PET scanner

Masayuki Nakazawa; Junichi Ohi; Hiromichi Tonami; Yoshihiro Yamada; Tetsuo Furumiya; Masafumi Furuta; Tomoaki Tsuda; Masanobu Sato; Yoshiyuki Yamakawa; Nobuya Hashizume; Ayako Akazawa; Keishi Kitamura

A prototype depth-of-interaction and time-of-flight positron emission tomography (DOI-TOF-PET) scanner was developed to offer enhanced spatial resolution with high sensitivity and high signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) in the reconstructed images. The detector ring is 775 mm diameter with 48 mm axial field-of-view (FOV) per ring. The system can be expanded up to three rings. The ring comprises 48 detector modules, each of which consists of four layers of 16 × 16 crystal elements and a 64ch PS-PMT (H8500 position sensitive photomultiplier tube, Hamamatsu Photonics K.K.) optically coupled with silicone resin. The size of the crystal elements are 2.9 mm × 2.9 mm and increase in depth through 5, 6, 7, and 8 mm, from the first to fourth layer, to reduce the sensitivity differences between each layer. The crystal material is used Lu2xGd2(1−x)SiO5 (Hitachi Chemical Co., Ltd.) because of its short decay time, high density and high light yield. A data acquisition board was developed to improve the spatial resolution and the timing resolution of the system. The TDC (time-to-digital Converter) chips (TDC-GPX, Acam Messelectronic) mounted on the board operate in high-resolution mode (R-mode, 27 ps/bin). In addition, a new timing correction method to correct the intrinsic timing difference both each detector and each crystal of the detector by using DOI information was developed. As a result, the average timing resolution of this system was 442 ps (FWHM). Reconstructed image quality with-/without-DOI-TOF technique was evaluated in GATE simulation and a preliminary iamge was obtained with the prototype system.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2014

Development of a dual-head mobile DOI-TOF PET system having multi-modality compatibility

Yamakawa Yoshiyuki; Tetsuya Kobayashi; Masafumi Furuta; Masanobu Sato; Junichi Ohi; Hiromichi Tonami; Tetsuo Furumiya; Tomoaki Tsuda; Masayuki Nakazawa; Nobuya Hashizume; Keishi Kitamura

We previously proposed the concept of “FlexiblePET”, a dual-head mobile DOI-TOF PET system which scans the patient lying on a bed equipped by another imaging/therapy device. Following the development of a small prototype with dual-head SiPM-based detectors showing a proof-of-concept for MR compatibility, we are now developing a human prototype with DOI-TOF detectors and a scalable data acquisition system. Each detector module consists of a 2-D crystal array (2.9 mm × 2.9 mm × 20 mm LGSO in a 16 × 16 array), a light guide and a 4 × 4 4-ch SiPM array. The detector has a four-layer DOI capability by a special reflector arrangement and is expected to have <; 500 ps coincidence timing resolution. The scanner has two arced detector heads (central angle: 135 degree, diameter: 778 mm), and each consists of 18 detector modules in transaxial direction and 3 rings in axial direction. This geometric configuration provides 715 mm transaxial FOV and 150 mm axial FOV. The detector head arrangement is changeable into four types: Top-Bottom, Left-Right, Side-C and Top-C, depending on imaging purpose. In addition, high-sensitivity imaging is possible by moving detector heads close to the patient. To compensate image quality degradation caused by the limited angle coincidence measurement, which is inherent in stable dualhead scanning, a new regularized TOF list-mode reconstruction algorithm that combines weighted maximum likelihood estimation and projection-space regularization was also developed. In this study, we will report initial results of physical performance evaluations of the prototype FlexiblePET system according to the NEMA NU 2-2007 standards. The experimental results support that the developed dual-head DOI-TOF PET protoptype system has the MR-compatibility and the acceptable image quality from the incomplete TOF projection measurement.


Archive | 2011

TWO-DIMENSIONAL POSITION MAP CORRECTING METHOD

Yoshihiro Yamada; Tomoaki Tsuda; Masanobu Sato


Archive | 2011

Radiation signal-processing unit and radiation detector provided with the same

Junichi Ohi; Masafumi Furuta; Masanobu Sato


Archive | 2008

METHOD OF CORRECTING TWO-DIMENSIONAL POSITION MAP AND RADIATION DETECTOR

Masanobu Sato; Yoshihiro Yamada; Nobuya Hashizume; Keishi Kitamura


Archive | 2016

POSITRON CT APPARATUS AND A TIMING CORRECTION METHOD

Tomoaki Tsuda; Masanobu Sato


Archive | 2008

TWO-DIMENSIONAL POSITION MAP CORRECTING METHOD, AND RADIATION DETECTING APPARATUS

Yoshihiro Yamada; Nobuya Hashizume; Masanobu Sato; Keishi Kitamura


Archive | 2011

TWO-DIMENSIONAL POSITION MAP CORRECTING METHOD (AS AMENDED)

Masanobu Sato; Yoshihiro Yamada; Nobuya Hashizume; Keishi Kitamura


Archive | 2012

Radiation detector signal processor and radiation detector provided therewith

Tomoaki Tsuda; Masanobu Sato

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