Spectral analysis of dynamic PET studies: a review of 20 years of method developments and applications (Q2013953)
From MaRDI portal
| This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes. Please use this page instead for the normal view: Spectral analysis of dynamic PET studies: a review of 20 years of method developments and applications |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6759156
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Spectral analysis of dynamic PET studies: a review of 20 years of method developments and applications |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6759156 |
Statements
Spectral analysis of dynamic PET studies: a review of 20 years of method developments and applications (English)
0 references
10 August 2017
0 references
Summary: In positron emission tomography (PET), spectral analysis (SA) allows the quantification of dynamic data by relating the radioactivity measured by the scanner in time to the underlying physiological processes of the system under investigation. Among the different approaches for the quantification of PET data, SA is based on the linear solution of the Laplace transform inversion whereas the measured arterial and tissue time-activity curves of a radiotracer are used to calculate the input response function of the tissue. In the recent years SA has been used with a large number of PET tracers in brain and nonbrain applications, demonstrating that it is a very flexible and robust method for PET data analysis. Differently from the most common PET quantification approaches that adopt standard nonlinear estimation of compartmental models or some linear simplifications, SA can be applied without defining any specific model configuration and has demonstrated very good sensitivity to the underlying kinetics. This characteristic makes it useful as an investigative tool especially for the analysis of novel PET tracers. The purpose of this work is to offer an overview of SA, to discuss advantages and limitations of the methodology, and to inform about its applications in the PET field.
0 references
positron emission tomography
0 references
spectral analysis
0 references