A dual-Kinect approach to determine torso surface motion for respiratory motion correction in PET

Heß M., Büther F., Gigengack F., Dawood M., Schäfers K.

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Purpose: Respiratory gating is commonly used to reduce blurring effects and attenuation correction artifacts in positron emission tomography (PET). Established clinically available methods that employ body-attached hardware for acquiring respiration signals rely on the assumption that external surface motion and internal organ motion are well correlated. In this paper, the authors present a markerless method comprising two Microsoft Kinects for determining the motion on the whole torso surface and aim to demonstrate its validity and usefulnessincluding the potential to study the external/internal correlation and to provide useful information for more advanced correction approaches. Methods: The data of two Kinects are used to calculate 3D representations of a patients torso surface with high spatial coverage. Motion signals can be obtained for any position by tracking the mean distance to a virtual camera with a view perpendicular to the surrounding surface. The authors have conducted validation experiments including volunteers and a moving high-precision platform to verify the methods suitability for providing meaningful data. In addition, the authors employed it during clinical 18F-FDG-PET scans and exemplarily analyzed the acquired data of ten cancer patients. External signals of abdominal and thoracic regions as well as data-driven signals were used for gating and compared with respect to detected displacement of present lesions. Additionally, the authors quantified signal similarities and time shifts by analyzing cross-correlation sequences. Results: The authors results suggest a Kinect depth resolution of approximately 1 mm at 75 cm distance. Accordingly, valid signals could be obtained for surface movements with small amplitudes in the range of only few millimeters. In this small sample of ten patients, the abdominal signals were better suited for gating the PET data than the thoracic signals and the correlation of data-driven signals was found to be stronger with abdominal signals than with thoracic signals (average Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.74±0.17 and 0.45±0.23, respectively). In all cases, except one, the abdominal respiratory motion preceded the thoracic motiona maximum delay of approximately 600 ms was detected. Conclusions: The method provides motion information with sufficiently high spatial and temporal resolution. Thus, it enables meaningful analysis in the form of comparisons between amplitudes and phase shifts of signals from different regions. In combination with a large field-of-view, as given by combining the data of two Kinect cameras, it yields surface representations that might be useful in the context of motion correction and motion modeling.

Details about the publication

JournalMedical Physics
Volume42
Issue5
Page range2276-2286
StatusPublished
Release year2015
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1118/1.4917163
Link to the full texthttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84927709425&origin=inward
KeywordsKinect; motion correction; PET; respiratory gating; respiratory motion

Authors from the University of Münster

Büther, Florian
Clinic for Nuclear Medicine
Dawood, Mohammad
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)
Gigengack, Fabian
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)
Heß, Mirco
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)
Schäfers, Klaus
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)