Peer Review
Cancer Imaging
ISSN 1470-7330
Search site with:PicoSearch


Content
Current Issue
Archive
Related Journals / Articles
Information
Aims and Scope
Editors and Board
Editorial Policy
Instructions for Authors
Copyright Transfer Form
Subscription Information
Advertising
Society
Aims
Membership
Annual Meeting
Communications
Send Email to ICIS
e-Med
Visit e-Med Web Site
Journals
Purchase
“To Promote Education in Cancer Imaging in the Multidisciplinary Management of Malignancy”

Home > Articles

PET/CT imaging: what radiologists need to know Open Access Article

Abstract

Positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) imaging is frequently requested in Oncology. Radiologists and nuclear medicine physicians are often asked to perform a panel of imaging examinations as part of the initial staging or follow-up of cancer patients. Medical imaging must therefore integrate polyvalent skills enabling imaging specialists to understand and interpret all types of images. In this context, PET imaging combined with non-enhanced CT, and diagnostic quality contrast-enhanced CT scan and optimisation of CT settings, is part of this multidisciplinary approach requiring the specific skills of a radiologist and a nuclear medicine physician. This approach must therefore be conducted in both directions: radiologists and nuclear medicine physicians should both know how to correlate PET and CT images, while preserving the specificities of each discipline. Radiologists need to be aware of several aspects of PET imaging: PET technology, the examination procedure and injection of iodinated contrast agent for high quality diagnostic CT, ideally followed by double interpretation of CT images, PET images and fused images. Radiologists should be familiar with PET imaging, as this procedure may be associated with several pitfalls and artefacts that need interpretation by a trained specialist. The authors analyse the examination technique of PET combined with non-enhanced and/or contrast-enhanced CT and the proposals for optimal interpretation of normal or pathological PET/CT fusion images.

Author

M. Benamor, L. Ollivier, H. Brisse, G. Moulin-Romsee, V. Servois and S. Neuenschwander

Contact Details

Corresponding address:
Myriam Benamor, MD, Institut Curie, Departement d'imagerie,
26 Rue d'Ulm, 75005 Paris, France

Reference

ICIS Cancer Imaging Volume 7 Special Issue A
DOI: 10.1102/1470-7330.2007.9012

Date Posted

1 October 2007


Open Access Article Open Access is provided for this article.

Print PDF

Size

1.11 MB

Minimum Estimated Download Times

ADSL 2Mb/s (Broadband):

4 seconds

ADSL 512Kb/s (Broadband):

17 seconds

64 Kb/s (ISDN):

2 minutes 21 seconds

33.3 Kb/s (Typical Modem):

4 minutes 32 seconds

No part of this publication or site may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the Publisher, e-MED Limited, Permissions, PO Box 66356, London, E14 1GW. Tel: +44 (0)207 719 8989 Fax: +44 (0)560 126 4446, permissions@cancerimaging.org.

© 2000-2010 International Cancer Imaging Society