Bone Material Analogues for PET/MRI Phantoms
Dharshan Chandramohan, Peng Cao, Misung Han, Hongyu An, John J., Sunderland, Paul E. Kinahan, Richard Laforest, Thomas A. Hope, Peder E. Z., Larson

TL;DR
This study develops plaster-based bone analogues doped with various agents to mimic human cortical bone's PET and MRI properties for use in PET/MRI phantoms.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel plaster-based bone analogue doped with copper sulfate that accurately replicates bone's PET/MRI attenuation and relaxation properties.
Findings
Plaster has similar attenuation to cortical bone.
Copper sulfate doping achieves bone-like T1 and T2* relaxation times.
Gadolinium doping significantly shortens T1 and T2* without changing attenuation.
Abstract
Purpose: To develop bone material analogues that can be used in construction of phantoms for simultaneous PET/MRI systems. Methods: Plaster was used as the basis for the bone material analogues tested in this study. It was mixed with varying concentrations of an iodinated CT contrast, a gadolinium-based MR contrast agent, and copper sulfate to modulate the attenuation properties and MRI properties (T1 and T2*). Attenuation was measured with CT and 68Ge transmission scans, and MRI properties were measured with quantitative ultrashort echo time pulse sequences. A proof-of-concept skull was created by plaster casting. Results: Undoped plaster has a 511 keV attenuation coefficient (~0.14 cm-1) similar to cortical bone (0.10-0.15 cm-1), but slightly longer T1 (~500 ms) and T2* (~1.2 ms) MR parameters compared to bone (T1 ~ 300 ms, T2* ~ 0.4 ms). Doping with the iodinated agent resulted…
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