The EMI-compatibility of the LabPET II detection module (DM) to develop a high-resolution simultaneous PET/MRI system is investigated. The experimental set-up evaluates the performance of two LabPET II DMs in close proximity to RF coils excited at three different frequencies mimicking the electromagnetic environments of 3 T, 7 T, and 9.4 T MRI scanners. A gradient coil, with switching frequency from 10 kHz to 100 kHz, also surrounds one of the DMs to investigate the effects of the gradient field on the individual detector performance, such as the baseline of the DC-voltage and noise level along with both the energy and coincidence time resolutions. Measurements demonstrate a position shift of the energy photopeaks (⩽9%) and a slight deterioration of the energy and coincidence time resolutions in the presence of electromagnetic interferences from the gradient and RF coils. The electromagnetic interferences cause an average degradation of up to ~50% of the energy resolution (in time-over-threshold spectra) and up to 18% of the timing resolution. Based on these results, a modified version of the DM, including a composite shielding as well as an improved heat pipe-based cooling mechanism, capable of stabilizing the temperature of the DM at ~40 °C, is proposed and investigated. This shielded version shows no evidence of performance degradation inside an MRI-like environment. The experimental results demonstrate that a properly shielded version of the LabPET II DM is a viable candidate for an MR-compatible PET scanner.
To address modern molecular imaging requirements, a digital positron emission tomography scanner for small animals has been developed at Université de Sherbrooke. Based on individual readout of avalanche photodiodes (APD) coupled to a LYSO/LGSO phoswich array, the scanner supports up to 3072 channels in a 16.2 cm diameter, 7.5 cm axial field of view with an isotropic 1.2 mm FWHM intrinsic spatial resolution at the center of the FOV. Custom data acquisition boards sample APD signals at 45 MHz and compute in real time crystal identification, energy and timing information of detected events at rates of up to 1250 raw counts per second per mm 2 (10k cps/channel). Real time digital signal analysis also filters out events outside the photopeak with crystal granularity to eliminate Compton events and electronic noise. Retained events are then merged into a single stream through a real-time sorting tree, at which end the prompt and delayed coincidences are extracted. A single Firewire link handles both control and data transfers with a computer. The LabPET TM features four data recording modes, giving the user the choice to retain data for research or to minimize file size for high coincidence count rate and imaging purposes. The electronic system also supports time synchronized data insertion for flags such as vital signs used in gated image reconstruction. Aside from data acquisition, hardware can generate live energy and discrimination histograms suitable for fast, automatic channel calibration.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.