X-Ray Properties
Sherril Spencer
To
identify the properties of an x-ray beam
Quality
To
& Intensity
gain an understanding of the application of
each of the properties
To gain an insight into the manipulation of
technical factors ( kV & mAs) with a view to
adjusting the properties of the beam
To gain an understanding of how
manipulation of technical factors affects the
appearance of an image ( contrast & density)
Aims of session
Quality
controlled by Kv
Intensity
controlled by mAS
Xray beam properties
To
produce a good x-ray image it is
important to provided the correct photon
energy for the object
Every object has its own optimum KvP
range
Dependent upon atomic number ( density )
Thickness ( linear attenuation co-efficient &
HVL)
Producing an x-ray image
X-Rays
Anode
Absorption
Results in ionisation( release of an electron)
Scatter
Coherent ( photon retains all its energy but
changes direction
Compton ( photon loses some of its energy and
released as a scattered photon)
Photo electric effect ( complete absorption of
energy)
Attenuation Processes
High KvP less absorption ( chest , GIT)
Dose reduction
Scatter has greater energy
Use of grid will absorb scatter
Low KV more absorption ( skeletal )
High image contrast
High dose
measure of the difference in density
between adjacent structures on an image.
Contrast
High Contrast
Low contrast
High contrast/ low contrast
Higher
the kV the greater the penetration
High kV gives a lower contrast
The higher the kV the lower the patient dose
however increases the amount of scatter.
Increasing the kV allows the tube current
(mA) or exposure time (s) to be reduced.
Generally an increase of 10 kV allows the mAs
to be approximately halved and visa versa.
Kilovoltage -summary
17
Power
per unit area (W/m2)
Intensity
affects density on image
Density
is a product of the quantity of x-ray
photons used to create an image
Intensity
Controls
current through filament
mA increase heat in filament resulting
in increase in e cloud
Greater number of e = greater no of
photons emitted from anode
Great no photons reach the image =
increase in overall blackness ( does not
change contrast)
mA ( tube current)
Density
Density
Density
Combined
with mA ( mAs)
Can be adjusted independently
To double image blackness double mAs
10mAs
10mA x 1 sec
20mA x 0.5 sec
5mA x 2sec
Time ( secs)
Collimation
= size of visible area of light
This
should be as small as possible to,
minimise the patient dose, but still include
the area of interest.
Collimation (Beam Size):
28
These
must be used if scatter is
significantly reducing contrast.e.g. When
irradiating large volumes.
Using a grid requires an increase in mA
thus increasing the patient dose.
Grids
31
QUESTIONS