Simulation of a Compton-based detector for low-dose high-resolution time-of-flight positron emission tomography
Kepler Domurat-Sousa, Cameron M. Poe, Maya S. McDaniel, Eric Spieglan,, Joao F. Shida, Evan Angelico, Bernhard W. Adams, Patrick J. La Riviere, Henry, J. Frisch, Allison H. Squires

TL;DR
This paper presents a simulation study of a novel low-Z scintillation detector for TOF-PET, demonstrating high accuracy in event localization, scatter rejection, and imaging quality at low radiation doses.
Contribution
It introduces a new low-Z detection medium and a Monte Carlo simulation framework to evaluate its potential for improved TOF-PET imaging.
Findings
87.1% pair identification accuracy
90% scatter rejection rate
Clear brain phantom imaging at <1% radiotracer dose
Abstract
Two major challenges in time-of-flight positron emission tomography (TOF-PET) are low spatial resolution and high radioactive dose to the patient, both of which result from limitations in detection technology rather than fundamental physics. A new type of TOF-PET detector employing low-atomic number (low-Z) scintillation media and large-area, high-resolution photodetectors to record Compton scattering locations in the detector has been proposed as a promising alternative, but the minimum technical requirements for such a system have not yet been established. Here we present a simulation study evaluating the potential of a proposed low-Z detection medium, linear alkylbenzene (LAB) doped with a switchable molecular recorder, for next-generation TOF-PET detection. We developed a custom Monte Carlo simulation of full-body TOF-PET using the TOPAS Geant4 software package. By quantifying…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Imaging Techniques and Applications · Radiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
