Publication | Closed Access
Design and engineering aspects of a high resolution positron tomograph for small animal imaging
107
Citations
15
References
1994
Year
Image ReconstructionEngineeringMicroscopyAdvanced ImagingX-ray ImagingPositron Emission TomographyEngineering AspectsHigh Resolution DeviceCalibrationDetection TechnologyInstrumentationRadiation ImagingNuclear MedicineRadiologyImage SlicesHealth SciencesRadiation DetectionMedical ImagingReconstruction TechniqueScintillatorRadiometrySensorsBiomedical ImagingImagingHigh Spatial ResolutionSmall Animal ImagingTomography
Describes the Sherbrooke positron emission tomograph, a very high resolution device dedicated to dynamic imaging of small laboratory animals. Its distinctive features are: small discrete scintillation detectors based on avalanche photodiodes (APD) to achieve uniform, isotropic, very high spatial resolution; parallel processing for low deadtime and high count rate capability; multispectral data acquisition hardware to improve sensitivity and scatter correction; modularity to allow design flexibility and upgradability. The system implements the "clam-shell" sampling scheme and a rotating rod transmission source. All acquisition parameters can be adjusted under computer control. Temperature stability at the detector site is ensured by the use of thermoelectric modules. The initial system consists of one layer of 256 modules (two rings of detectors) defining 3 image slices in a 118 mm diameter by 10.5 mm thick field. The axial field can be extended to 50 mm using 4 layers of modules (8 rings of detectors). The design constraints and engineering aspects of an APD-based PET scanner are reviewed and preliminary results are reported.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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