Total-Body PET: Maximizing Sensitivity to Create New Opportunities for Clinical Research and Patient Care
University of California Davis Medical Center · University of California, Davis · +2 more institutions
Abstract
PET is widely considered the most sensitive technique available for noninvasively studying physiology, metabolism, and molecular pathways in the living human being. However, the utility of PET, being a photon-deficient modality, remains constrained by factors including low signal-to-noise ratio, long imaging times, and concerns about radiation dose. Two developments offer the potential to dramatically increase the effective sensitivity of PET. First by increasing the geometric coverage to encompass the entire body, sensitivity can be increased by a factor of about 40 for total-body imaging or a factor of about 4-5 for imaging a single organ such as the brain or heart. The world's first total-body PET/CT…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 43.85
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 58
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Sensitivity (control systems)
- Pet imaging
- Medical physics
- Whole body imaging
- Positron emission tomography
- Scanner
- Modality (human–computer interaction)
- Medicine