Partial-Volume Effect

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Partial-Volume Effect

Partial-Volume Effect

PET images are inherently affected by the partial-volume effect. This means that the measured tracer activity concentration is not accurate due to the relatively low image resolution and the limited tissue sampling. The low spatial resolution of the PET system causes a blurring of the image, so that high activities (from a hot lesion) are spread to the surrounding as illustrated below. This effect is called spill-out. The same effect also causes a spill-in of background activity into the volume of interest.

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As a consequence, hot lesions tend to appear less aggressive (reduced maximum) but bigger (spreading) than they are in reality.

Partial-volume effects are complex: Spill-in and spill-out depend on the geometry of the objects, the activity distribution of the tracer, and on the resolution of the scanner which may vary across the imaging field-of-view. Therefore, practical correction approaches have to assume certain conditions and can only be approximate.

VOI Based Partial-Volume Correction (GTM Method)

The Geometric Transfer Matrix (GTM) method according to Rousset et al. [6] restricts partial volume correction to the signal of the true objects which are constituted by VOIs. The relation of measured PET values (affected by the partial-volume effect) to the true PET values is given by the matrix equation below

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with the following notations:

Ctrue

Vector of the true average activity concentration in the different VOIs of interest. The vector length n equals the number of object VOIs.

Cmeasured

Actually measured average activity concentration in the different VOIs. Each VOI is assumed to have a homogeneous concentration.

GTM

Geometric Transfer Matrix which describes the spill-over among all the VOIs. The matrix is square with nxn weighting elements wi,j which express the fraction of true activity spilled over from VOIi into VOIj.

In practice, wi,j is calculated as follows: A binary map is created with 1 in all pixels of VOIi and 0 elsewhere. The map is convolved with the imaging Point-Spread Function (PSF), and in the resulting spillover map the weighted average of all VOIj pixels calculated.

The GTM equation above represents a system of linear equations. Once the weights have been calculated, the system can be solved for the true values Ctrue by matrix inversion. It has been shown [4] that this algorithm is robust to noise propagation during the correction process.

LMA Variant of GTM Method

The LMA (Local Means Analysis) GTM method [3] uses the homogeneous regions localized by the segmentation and calculates the average uptake in the inner of the structures. The percentage of pixels per segment considered for averaging is a parameter of the method. With 100% pixels included, the LMA GTM method equals the standard GTM method.