Preliminary Experience with Small Animal SPECT Imaging on Clinical Gamma Cameras

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers
ISSN: 2314-6133
E-ISSN: 2314-6141

Publication date

Advisors

Tutors

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Hindawi
Metrics
Google Scholar
lacobus
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

The traditional lack of techniques suitable for in vivo imaging has induced a great interest in molecular imaging for preclinical research. Nevertheless, its use spreads slowly due to the difficulties in justifying the high cost of the current dedicated preclinical scanners. An alternative for lowering the costs is to repurpose old clinical gamma cameras to be used for preclinical imaging. In this paper we assess the performance of a portable device, that is, working coupled to a single-head clinical gamma camera, and we present our preliminary experience in several small animal applications. Our findings, based on phantom experiments and animal studies, provided an image quality, in terms of contrast-noise trade-off, comparable to dedicated preclinical pinhole-based scanners. We feel that our portable device offers an opportunity for recycling the widespread availability of clinical gamma cameras in nuclear medicine departments to be used in small animal SPECT imaging and we hope that it can contribute to spreading the use of preclinical imaging within institutions on tight budgets.

Description

Keywords

Bibliographic citation

Aguiar, P., Silva-Rodríguez, J., Herranz, M., & Ruibal, A. (2014). Preliminary Experience with Small Animal SPECT Imaging on Clinical Gamma Cameras. Biomed Research International, 2014, 1-7. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/369509

Relation

Has part

Has version

Is based on

Is part of

Is referenced by

Is version of

Requires

Sponsors

This work was supported in part by public Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias ISCIII PS09/01206 and PI11/01806. P. Aguiar was awarded a public fellowship from Xunta de Galicia, POS-A/2013/001

Rights

Copyright © 2014 P. Aguiar et al.This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited