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Coded-aperture imaging in nuclear medicineCoded-aperture imaging is a technique for imaging sources that emit high-energy radiation. This type of imaging involves shadow casting and not reflection or refraction. High-energy sources exist in x ray and gamma-ray astronomy, nuclear reactor fuel-rod imaging, and nuclear medicine. Of these three areas nuclear medicine is perhaps the most challenging because of the limited amount of radiation available and because a three-dimensional source distribution is to be determined. In nuclear medicine a radioactive pharmaceutical is administered to a patient. The pharmaceutical is designed to be taken up by a particular organ of interest, and its distribution provides clinical information about the function of the organ, or the presence of lesions within the organ. This distribution is determined from spatial measurements of the radiation emitted by the radiopharmaceutical. The principles of imaging radiopharmaceutical distributions with coded apertures are reviewed. Included is a discussion of linear shift-variant projection operators and the associated inverse problem. A system developed at the University of Arizona in Tucson consisting of small modular gamma-ray cameras fitted with coded apertures is described.
Document ID
19900006892
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Smith, Warren E.
(Rochester Univ. NY., United States)
Barrett, Harrison H.
(Arizona Univ. Tucson., United States)
Aarsvold, John N.
(Arizona Univ. Tucson., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
November 1, 1989
Publication Information
Publication: NASA, Langley Research Center, Visual Information Processing for Television and Telerobotics
Subject Category
Instrumentation And Photography
Accession Number
90N16208
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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