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Dive into the research topics where Steve D. Mann is active.

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Featured researches published by Steve D. Mann.


Journal of Oncology | 2012

Initial In Vivo Quantification of Tc-99m Sestamibi Uptake as a Function of Tissue Type in Healthy Breasts Using Dedicated Breast SPECT-CT

Steve D. Mann; Kristy L. Perez; Emily McCracken; Jainil P. Shah; Terence Z. Wong; Martin P. Tornai

A pilot study is underway to quantify in vivo the uptake and distribution of Tc-99m Sestamibi in subjects without previous history of breast cancer using a dedicated SPECT-CT breast imaging system. Subjects undergoing diagnostic parathyroid imaging studies were consented and imaged as part of this IRB-approved breast imaging study. For each of the seven subjects, one randomly selected breast was imaged prone-pendant using the dedicated, compact breast SPECT-CT system underneath the shielded patient support. Iteratively reconstructed and attenuation and/or scatter corrected images were coregistered; CT images were segmented into glandular and fatty tissue by three different methods; the average concentration of Sestamibi was determined from the SPECT data using the CT-based segmentation and previously established quantification techniques. Very minor differences between the segmentation methods were observed, and the results indicate an average image-based in vivo Sestamibi concentration of 0.10 ± 0.16 μCi/mL with no preferential uptake by glandular or fatty tissues.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Manufacturing and Integration Status of the JWST OSIM Optical Simulator

Joseph Sullivan; Bill Eichhorn; Rob von Handorf; Derek S. Sabatke; Nick Barr; Rich Nyquist; Bob Pederson; Rick Bennnett; Paul Volmer; Dave Happs; Adrian Nagle; Rick Ortiz; Tony Kouri; Paul Hauser; Jon Seerveld; Dave Kubalak; Brad Greeley; Claef Hakun; Doug Leviton; Qian Gong; Pam Davila; Ray Ohl; Jeff Kirk; Clint Davis; Jenny Chu; Erin Wilson; Bill Chang; Steve D. Mann; Robert Rashford; Corbett Smith

OSIM is a full field, cryogenic, optical simulator of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Optical Telescope Element (OTE). It provides simulated point source/star images for optical performance testing of the JWST Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM). OSIM is currently being assembled at the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC). In this paper, we describe the capabilities, design, manufacturing and integration status, and uses of the OSIM during the optical test program of ISIM and the Science Instruments. Where applicable, the ISIM tests are also described.


Medical Physics | 2015

Three dimensional dose distribution comparison of simple and complex acquisition trajectories in dedicated breast CT

Jainil P. Shah; Steve D. Mann; Randolph L. McKinley; Martin P. Tornai

PURPOSE A novel breast CT system capable of arbitrary 3D trajectories has been developed to address cone beam sampling insufficiency as well as to image further into the patients chest wall. The purpose of this study was to characterize any trajectory-related differences in 3D x-ray dose distribution in a pendant target when imaged with different orbits. METHODS Two acquisition trajectories were evaluated: circular azimuthal (no-tilt) and sinusoidal (saddle) orbit with ±15° tilts around a pendant breast, using Monte Carlo simulations as well as physical measurements. Simulations were performed with tungsten (W) filtration of a W-anode source; the simulated source flux was normalized to the measured exposure of a W-anode source. A water-filled cylindrical phantom was divided into 1 cm(3) voxels, and the cumulative energy deposited was tracked in each voxel. Energy deposited per voxel was converted to dose, yielding the 3D distributed dose volumes. Additionally, three cylindrical phantoms of different diameters (10, 12.5, and 15 cm) and an anthropomorphic breast phantom, initially filled with water (mimicking pure fibroglandular tissue) and then with a 75% methanol-25% water mixture (mimicking 50-50 fibroglandular-adipose tissues), were used to simulate the pendant breast geometry and scanned on the physical system. Ionization chamber calibrated radiochromic film was used to determine the dose delivered in a 2D plane through the center of the volume for a fully 3D CT scan using the different orbits. RESULTS Measured experimental results for the same exposure indicated that the mean dose measured throughout the central slice for different diameters ranged from 3.93 to 5.28 mGy, with the lowest average dose measured on the largest cylinder with water mimicking a homogeneously fibroglandular breast. These results align well with the cylinder phantom Monte Carlo studies which also showed a marginal difference in dose delivered by a saddle trajectory in the central slice. Regardless of phantom material or filled fluid density, dose delivered by the saddle scan was negligibly different than the simple circular, no-tilt scans. The average dose measured in the breast phantom was marginally higher for saddle than the circular no tilt scan at 3.82 and 3.87 mGy, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Not only does nontraditional 3D-trajectory CT scanning yield more complete sampling of the breast volume but also has comparable dose deposition throughout the breast and anterior chest volume, as verified by Monte Carlo simulation and physical measurements.


international conference on breast imaging | 2012

Initial evaluation of a newly developed high resolution CT imager for dedicated breast CT

Jainil P. Shah; Steve D. Mann; Andrew M. Polemi; Martin P. Tornai; Randolph L. McKinley; George Zentai; Michelle Richmond; Larry Partain

A new, high resolution 40x30cm2 area CsI-TFT based CT imager having 127μm pixel pitch was developed for fully-3D breast CT imaging as part of a SPECT-CT system. The imager has two narrow edges suited for pendant breast CT imaging close to the chest wall. The scintillator thickness of 600 microns provides >90% absorption for the 36keV mean x-ray energy of the cone beam source. The 2D MTF is ˜7.5% at the 3.9 lp/mm Nyquist frequency. The imager has excellent linearity over the full dynamic range. The imager is mounted on the CT device and initial tomographic imaging of geometric and breast phantoms demonstrate the reliable and robust imaging capabilities of this device for breast CT.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Design of a nested SPECT-CT system with fully suspended CT sub-system for dedicated breast imaging

Jainil P. Shah; Steve D. Mann; Randolph L. McKinley; Martin P. Tornai

A fully suspended, stand-alone cone beam CT system capable of complex trajectories, in addition to a simple circular trajectory, has previously been developed and shown to minimize cone beam sampling insufficiencies and have better sampling close to the chest wall for pendant breast CT imaging. A hybrid SPECT-CT system with SPECT capable of complex 3D trajectories has already been implemented and is currently in use. Here, the individual systems are redesigned into one hybrid system where each individual component is capable of traversing independent, arbitrary trajectories around a pendant breast and anterior chest wall in a common field of view. The integration also involves key hardware upgrades: a new high resolution 40x30cm2 flat panel CT imager with an 8mm bezel on two sides for closer chest wall access, a new x-ray source, and a unique tilting mechanism to enable the spherical trajectories for CT. A novel method to tilt the CT gantry about a 3D center of rotation is developed and included in the new gantry, while preserving the fully-3D SPECT system nested within the larger CT gantry. The flexibility of the integrated system is illustrated.


Journal of X-ray Science and Technology | 2017

Characterization of X-ray scattering for various phantoms and clinical breast geometries using breast CT on a dedicated hybrid system

Jainil P. Shah; Steve D. Mann; Martin P. Tornai

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to utilize a dedicated breast CT system using a 2D beam stop array to physically evaluate the scatter to primary ratios (SPRs) of different geometric phantoms and prospectively acquired clinical patient data. METHODS Including clinically unrealizable compositions of 100% glandular and 100% fat, projection images were acquired using three geometrically different phantoms filled with fluids simulating breast tissue. The beam stop array method was used for measuring scatter in projection space, and creating the scatter corrected primary images. 2D SPRs were calculated. Additionally, a new figure of merit, the 3D normalized scatter contribution (NSC) volumes were calculated. RESULTS The 2D SPR values (0.52-1.10) were primarily dependent on phantom geometry; a secondary dependence was due to their uniform density; 2D SPRs were low frequency and smoothly varying in the uniformly filled phantoms. SPRs of clinical patient data followed similar trends as phantoms, but with noticeable deviations and high frequency components due to the heterogeneous distribution of glandular tissue. The maximum measured patient 2D SPRs were all <0.6, even for the largest diameter breast. These results demonstrate modest scatter components with changing object geometries and densities; the 3D NSC volumes with higher frequency components help visualize scatter distribution throughout the reconstructed image volumes. Furthermore, the SPRs in the heterogeneous clinical breast cases were underestimated by the equivalent density, uniformly filled phantoms. CONCLUSIONS These results provide guidance on the use of uniformly distributed density and differently shaped phantoms when considering simulations. They also clearly demonstrate that results from patients can vary considerably from 2D SPRs of uniformly simulated phantoms.


Medical Physics | 2012

SU‐E‐l‐01: Investigating the Dependence of 2D and 3D Scatter‐To‐Primary Ratios on Breast Density in Clinical Breast CT

Jainil P. Shah; Steve D. Mann; Martin P. Tornai

PURPOSE To characterize 2D and 3D scatter-to-primary ratios (SPR) and investigate the dependence of SPR on breast density based on clinicalpatient imaging on our dedicated SPECT-CT mammotomography system. METHODS As a part of an on-going IRB approved protocol, 7 consented women underwent a breast imaging study with our SPECT-CT system. Using a quasi-monochromatic x-ray cone beam and flat panel detector, 240 projections were obtained. 6 beam stop array (BSA) projections were also obtained over 40 degree intervals. The CT data were scatter corrected using a phantom-validated algorithm based on the BSA technique. For each projection, 2D scatter fluence was determined behind each beam stop shadow through the patients breast, and cubic spline interpolated throughout the thresholded breast region. 2D SPRs were calculated as the average of 6 measured ratios of scatter projections to scatter corrected (primary) projections. Angular cubic spline interpolation was performed to obtain the remaining 234 azimuthal BSA projections for reconstruction correction. Corrected and uncorrected projection images were individually reconstructed and 3D SPRs calculated as the ratio of difference between primary and un-corrected volumes to primary volumes. Histograms of the reconstructed patient data-sets yielded distinct peaks representing linear attenuation coefficients of glandular+skin and fatty tissue. Percentage glandular and fatty tissue was estimated by fitting a double Gaussian to the histogram and integrating area under the curve. RESULTS Only 4 CT data sets devoid of motion and truncation artifacts were suitable for scatter correction. Preliminary results show that 2D SPR values peak at the center of breast volumes and were greatest (∼50%) for the most glandular breast, whereas 3D SPR values remained fairly constant throughout the breast and did not obviously correlate with density, consistent with prior phantom results. CONCLUSIONS 2D SPR values are greater in breasts with higher glandular tissue composition, whereas 3D SPR values appear independent of breast composition. This work is funded by the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health grant RO1-CA096821, with partial support (JHP) from NIH T32-EB001040. MPT is the inventor of this CT technology, and is named as an inventor on the patent for this technology awarded to Duke University. If this technology becomes commercially successful, MPT and Duke could benefit financially.


IWDM 2016 Proceedings of the 13th International Workshop on Breast Imaging - Volume 9699 | 2016

Development of Fully-3D CT in a Hybrid SPECT-CT Breast Imaging System

Martin P. Tornai; Jainil P. Shah; Steve D. Mann; Randolph L. McKinley

This work describes initial measurements with the CT subsystem of the assembled, fully-3D, hybrid SPECT-CT system for dedicated breast imaging. The hybrid system, designed for clinical breast imaging, consists of fully-flexible SPECT and CT subsystems, with each capable of 3D acquisition motions. The SPECT subsystem employs a 16 × 20i¾?cm2 CZT detector with 2.5i¾?mm pixellation, is capable of viewing into the chest wall in addition to imaging the complete breast volume, and has been extensively reported elsewhere. The polar tilting capability of the CT subsystem has marked improvement in volumetric sampling while eliminating cone beam artifacts due to the fully-3D acquisitions. The CT subsystem can also view into the chest wall, while delivering <5i¾?mGy total dose, compared with a simple circular orbit breast CT. The CT subsystem consists of a 0.4i¾?mm focal spot x-ray tube with a rotating 14i¾? W-anode angle, and a 40i¾?×i¾?30i¾?cm2 CsITl flat panel imager having 127 micron pixellation and 8.0i¾?mm bezel edge, placed on opposing ends of the completely suspended gantry. A linear stage mechanism is used to tilt the suspended CT gantry up to ±15i¾? in the polar directions about the 3D center of rotation; the SPECT system is nestled inside the suspended CT gantry, oriented perpendicular to the CT source-detector pair. Both subsystems rest on an azimuthal rotation stage enabling truncated spherical trajectories independently for each. Several simple and more complex 3D trajectories were implemented and characterized for the CT subsystem. Imaging results demonstrate that additional off-axis projection views of various geometric phantoms and intact cadaveric breast, facilitated by the polar tilting yield more complete breast-volume sampling and markedly improved iteratively reconstructed images, especially compared to simple circular orbit data. This is the first implementation of a hybrid SPECT-CT system with fully-3D positioning for the two subsystems, and could have various applications in diagnostic breast imaging.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Comparison of the effect of simple and complex acquisition trajectories on the 2D SPR and 3D voxelized differences fordedicated breast CT imaging

Jainil P. Shah; Steve D. Mann; Randolph L. McKinley; Martin P. Tornai

The 2D scatter-to-primary (SPR) ratios and 3D voxelized difference volumes were characterized for a cone beam breast CT scanner capable of arbitrary (non-traditional) 3D trajectories. The CT system uses a 30x30cm2 flat panel imager with 197 micron pixellation and a rotating tungsten anode x-ray source with 0.3mm focal spot, with an SID of 70cm. Data were acquired for two cylindrical phantoms (12.5cm and 15cm diameter) filled with three different combinations of water and methanol yielding a range of uniform densities. Projections were acquired with two acquisition trajectories: 1) simple-circular azimuthal orbit with fixed tilt; and 2) saddle orbit following a ±15° sinusoidal trajectory around the object. Projection data were acquired in 2x2 binned mode. Projections were scatter corrected using a beam stop array method, and the 2D SPR was measured on the projections. The scatter corrected and uncorrected data were then reconstructed individually using an iterative ordered subsets convex algorithm, and the 3D difference volumes were calculated as the absolute difference between the two. Results indicate that the 2D SPR is ~7-15% higher on projections with greatest tilt for the saddle orbit, due to the longer x-ray path length through the volume, compared to the 0° tilt projections. Additionally, the 2D SPR increases with object diameter as well as density. The 3D voxelized difference volumes are an estimate of the scatter contribution to the reconstructed attenuation coefficients on a voxel level. They help visualize minor deficiencies and artifacts in the volumes due to correction methods.


Medical Physics | 2012

SU-E-I-02: Size-Dependent Computed Tomography Histogram Analysis: Towards Breast Tissue Segmentation

Steve D. Mann; Jainil P. Shah; Martin P. Tornai

PURPOSE To examine the effects of object size on scatter-corrected CT histograms to be used in threshold-based tissue segmentation. METHODS A polyethylene cone filled with various concentrations of water and methanol mixtures, simulating glandular and adipose tissues, were imaged with our quasi-monochromatic dedicated breast CT, and scatter corrected using beam-stop array measurements. Images were reconstructed using iterative OSC, and individual coronal slices along the central axis of the cone were analyzed, with radii ranging from 3.25-6.25cm. Histograms from each slice were fit with two Gaussians (fluid filling and cone material) using nonlinear least squares methods, and the corresponding standard deviation and peak centroid of each filled material were evaluated as a function of object radius. Identical methods were applied to dedicated breast CT images of four patients for clinical comparison. RESULTS Analysis of phantoms and breast data indicates low correlation between the standard deviation and object diameter. The centroids of the Gaussian peaks demonstrate an inverse linear relationship with increasing object size, independent of object material. The clinical datasets show a similar linear relationship between centroids and breast radius. CONCLUSIONS Data indicate that using a linear combination of Gaussian distribution functions to segment breast tissue in scatter corrected, quasi-monochromatic cone beam dedicated breast CT is possible. An object size-independent variation of attenuation values may allow for consistent restraints on initial fit parameters, resulting in improved confidence using Gaussian curve fitting. Appropriate scaling of the size-dependent volume slices, or independent slice analysis, is necessary to minimize binning variability for accurate tissue segmentation using Gaussian curve fitting. This work is supported by National Institutes of Health (R01-CA096821) and NIH Training Grant (T32-EB007185). MPT is the inventor of this hybrid breast imaging technology, and is named as an inventor on the patent for this technology assigned to Duke (US Pat. #7,609,808). If this technology becomes commercially successful, MPT and Duke could benefit financially.

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Claef Hakun

Goddard Space Flight Center

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