Motion simulation of radio-labeled cells in whole-body positron emission tomography
Nils Marquardt, Tobias Hengsbach, Marco Mauritz, Benedikt Wirth, Klaus Sch\"afers

TL;DR
This paper introduces CeFloPS, a comprehensive workflow for simulating the movement of radio-labeled cells in the human body for PET imaging, aiding in the validation of cell tracking algorithms.
Contribution
It presents a novel simulation framework that models cell movement based on blood flow and tissue interactions, integrating anatomical and physiological data for realistic PET data generation.
Findings
Successfully simulates cell trajectories in whole-body PET scenarios.
Generates realistic PET listmode data for validation purposes.
Demonstrates capability to compare simulated and reconstructed cell distributions.
Abstract
Cell tracking is a subject of active research gathering great interest in medicine and biology. Positron emission tomography (PET) is well suited for tracking radio-labeled cells in vivo due to its exceptional sensitivity and whole-body capability. For validation, ground-truth data are desirable that realistically mimic the flow of cells in a clinical situation. This study develops a workflow (CeFloPS) for simulating moving radio-labeled cells in a human phantom. From the XCAT phantom, the blood vessels are reduced to nodal networks along which cells can move and distribute to organs and tissues. The movement is directed by the blood flow, which is calculated in each node using the Hagen-Pooiseuille equation and Kirchhoff's laws assuming laminar flow. Organs are voxelized and movement of cells from artery entry to vein exit is generated via a biased 3D random walk. The probabilities of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Imaging Techniques and Applications · Medical Imaging and Pathology Studies · Radiopharmaceutical Chemistry and Applications
