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dc.creatorSpirou, S. V.en
dc.creatorPapadimitroulas, P.en
dc.creatorLiakou, P.en
dc.creatorGeorgoulias, P.en
dc.creatorLoudos, G.en
dc.date.accessioned2015-11-23T10:48:19Z
dc.date.available2015-11-23T10:48:19Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier10.1097/mnm.0000000000000345
dc.identifier.issn0143-3636
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11615/33302
dc.description.abstractPurposeTo present and evaluate a new methodology to investigate the effect of attenuation correction (AC) in single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) using textural features analysis, Monte Carlo techniques, and a computational anthropomorphic model.Materials and methodsThe GATE Monte Carlo toolkit was used to simulate SPECT experiments using the XCAT computational anthropomorphic model, filled with a realistic biodistribution of Tc-99m-N-DBODC. The simulated gamma camera was the Siemens ECAM Dual-Head, equipped with a parallel hole lead collimator, with an image resolution of 3.54x3.54mm(2). Thirty-six equispaced camera positions, spanning a full 360 degrees arc, were simulated. Projections were calculated after applying a 20% energy window or after eliminating all scattered photons. The activity of the radioisotope was reconstructed using the MLEM algorithm. Photon attenuation was accounted for by calculating the radiological pathlength in a perpendicular line from the center of each voxel to the gamma camera. Twenty-two textural features were calculated on each slice, with and without AC, using 16 and 64 gray levels. A mask was used to identify only those pixels that belonged to each organ.ResultsTwelve of the 22 features showed almost no dependence on AC, irrespective of the organ involved. In both the heart and the liver, the mean and SD were the features most affected by AC. In the liver, six features were affected by AC only on some slices. Depending on the slice, skewness decreased by 22-34% with AC, kurtosis by 35-50%, long-run emphasis mean by 71-91%, and long-run emphasis range by 62-95%. In contrast, gray-level non-uniformity mean increased by 78-218% compared with the value without AC and run percentage mean by 51-159%. These results were not affected by the number of gray levels (16 vs. 64) or the data used for reconstruction: with the energy window or without scattered photons.ConclusionThe mean and SD were the main features affected by AC. In the heart, no other feature was affected. In the liver, other features were affected, but the effect was slice dependent. The number of gray levels did not affect the results. Copyright (C) 2015 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.en
dc.source.uri<Go to ISI>://WOS:000359854400013
dc.subjectattenuation correctionen
dc.subjectcomputational anthropomorphic modelen
dc.subjectGATE Monteen
dc.subjectCarlo toolkiten
dc.subjectsingle photon emission computed tomographyen
dc.subjecttexturalen
dc.subjectfeaturesen
dc.subjectXCATen
dc.subjectMYOCARDIAL-PERFUSION SPECTen
dc.subjectJOINT POSITION STATEMENTen
dc.subjectCT TEXTUREen
dc.subjectCARDIAC SPECTen
dc.subjectCANCER HETEROGENEITYen
dc.subjectTUMOR HETEROGENEITYen
dc.subjectNUCLEAR-CARDIOLOGYen
dc.subjectAMERICAN-SOCIETYen
dc.subjectSURVIVALen
dc.subjectCHEMOTHERAPYen
dc.subjectRadiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imagingen
dc.titleInvestigation of attenuation correction in SPECT using textural features, Monte Carlo simulations, and computational anthropomorphic modelsen
dc.typejournalArticleen


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