PMID: 6974769Oct 1, 1981Paper

Biplanar cardiac blood-pool tomography

Journal of Nuclear Medicine : Official Publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine
S G MirellW H Blahd

Abstract

Dynamic transverse axial wall tomograms of the left ventricle (LV) are reconstructed by a new technique from anterior and LAO views acquired with a conventional scintillation camera imaging the distribution of in-vivo Tc-99m-labeled red blood cells. By confining reconstruction to the singular contiguous uniform concentration of activity in the LV, the requisite angular samplings for a given level of accuracy are substantially reduced in this restricted form of emission computed tomography (ECT). Static phantom studies using a series of volumes having various cross-sectional dimensions demonstrate tomographic edge reconstruction with less than or equal to 12% rms radial error. The dynamic cardiac ECT is demonstrated in a series of representative patient studies by reconstruction of wall tomograms in the end-diastolic and end-systolic phases of the 28-frame cardiac cycle. In contrast to the conventional dual multiframe projection views, the motion tomograms derived from the reconstructions clearly show the complete three-dimensional perspective of wall displacement.

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