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Total-Body PET/CT: Pros and Cons

Rodney J. Hicks, Robert E. Ware, Jason Callahan

2024Seminars in Nuclear Medicine22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PET/CT devices with an axial field-of-view (FOV) of 1 m allow simultaneous imaging from the head to the upper thighs, the typical axial extent of many "whole-body" oncological studies acquired by moving a patient sequentially through a conventional FOV device, or rapid total-body imaging using the same approach. Increasing the FOV to around 2 m provides true simultaneous total-body imaging. Either approach dramatically increases the sensitivity for detection of annihilation events arising within the body. For the purposes of this review, both configurations are considered to represent "total-body" PET/CT devices because they share both advantages and disadvantages. These pros and cons are discussed in the context of both clinical and research applications from a patient and institutional perspective.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineconsNuclear medicinePositron emission tomographyMedical physicsRadiologyProgramming languageComputer scienceMedical Imaging Techniques and ApplicationsRadiomics and Machine Learning in Medical ImagingAdvanced Radiotherapy Techniques
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