Impact of metal implants on xSPECT/CT Bone reconstruction: the "shining metal artefact".

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_FEA888532A02
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Publication sub-type
Case report (case report): feedback on an observation with a short commentary.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Impact of metal implants on xSPECT/CT Bone reconstruction: the "shining metal artefact".
Journal
European journal of hybrid imaging
Author(s)
Lima TVM, Bhure U., Pérez Lago M.S., Thali Y., Matijasevic S., Roos J., Strobel K.
ISSN
2510-3636 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2510-3636
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/10/2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
4
Number
1
Pages
18
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Novel reconstruction algorithms, such as xSPECT Bone, are gaining more and more importance in Nuclear Medicine. With xSPECT Bone, the reconstructed emission image is enhanced by the information obtained in the corresponding CT image. The CT defines tissue classes according to the Hounsfield units. In the iterative reconstruction, each tissue class is handled separately in the forward projection step, and all together in the back projection step. As a consequence, xSPECT Bone reconstruction generates images with improved boundary delineation and better anatomic representation of tracer activity. Applying this technique, however, showed that artefacts may occur, when no uptake regions, like metal implants, exhibit fictitious uniform tracer uptake. Due to limitations in spatial resolution in gamma cameras, the xSPECT Bone reconstructed image resulted in spill-out activity from surrounding high uptake region being uniformly distributed over the metal implants. This new technology of xSPECT Bone reconstruction in general enhances the image quality of SPECT/CT; however, the potential introduction of specific artefacts which inadvertently come along with this new technology and their frequency have not yet been addressed in the literature. Therefore, the purpose of this work was to identify and characterize these specific metal artefacts (the so-called shining metal artefact) in order to reduce false positives and avoid potentially misdiagnosing loosened or infected implants.
In this work, we report five cases imaged with bone SPECT/CT of 5 anatomical regions (foot, elbow, spine, shoulder, ribs and knee). All cases demonstrated "shining metal artefacts" in xSPECT Bone reconstruction.
While xSPECT Bone reconstruction algorithm significantly improves image quality for the diagnosis of bone and joint disorders with SPECT/CT, specific "shining metal artefacts" caused by the xSPECT Bone have to be recognized in order to avoid image misinterpretation suggesting metallic implant loosening or possible infection. The simultaneous analysis of conventionally reconstructed SPECT images (for Siemens the Flash3D reconstruction) helps to avoid misinterpretation of potential artefacts introduced by xSPECT Bone reconstruction.
Keywords
Bone SPECT/CT, Flash3D, Metal implant, Reconstruction artefact, Shining metal artefact, xSPECT Bone
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
06/07/2021 11:09
Last modification date
13/04/2024 7:05
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