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Asst - Prof.Dr - Raghad Zuhair Medical Image Processing

This document discusses the basics of computed tomography (CT) image formation. It explains that in a CT scan, an x-ray tube and detector array rotates around the patient, taking intensity measurements from many angles to reconstruct cross-sectional images. Each scan determines the composition of transverse cross-sections. The attenuation values are determined through solving equations simultaneously based on measured intensities. CT numbers represent differences in x-ray attenuation and are used to assign grayscale values in images. Advantages of CT include fast image rendering and ability to reconstruct images post-acquisition, while disadvantages include radiation exposure and need for quality detectors and software.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
61 views55 pages

Asst - Prof.Dr - Raghad Zuhair Medical Image Processing

This document discusses the basics of computed tomography (CT) image formation. It explains that in a CT scan, an x-ray tube and detector array rotates around the patient, taking intensity measurements from many angles to reconstruct cross-sectional images. Each scan determines the composition of transverse cross-sections. The attenuation values are determined through solving equations simultaneously based on measured intensities. CT numbers represent differences in x-ray attenuation and are used to assign grayscale values in images. Advantages of CT include fast image rendering and ability to reconstruct images post-acquisition, while disadvantages include radiation exposure and need for quality detectors and software.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

CT

Lecture3
[Link] Zuhair
Medical Image Processing

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Computed Tomography
- The basics of image formation

• Here the x-ray tube and detector array makes many sweeps past the patient.

• The x-ray tube and detector array is capable of rotating around the axis of the
patient.

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• Each scan tries to determine the composition of each transverse cross section.
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Willi Kalender, Computed Tomography, Publicis Corporate Publishing 2005

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Computed Tomography :Basics Image
• As the x-ray tube and detectors swing around an intensity profile mapping is
formation
created.

• This could also be written as an attenuation profile which is the incident intensity
minus the transmitted intensity.

• This generates a set of N equations that will be solved simultaneously for μ(x,y) in
the image reconstruction system.

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Homogeneous Inhomogeneous Inhomogeneous
object, object, object,
monochromatic monochromatic polychromatic
radiation radiation radiation
μ(x,y) =
?

In a CT scan we measure the intensity of radiation. The attenuation value,


μ, is easily determined if you have a homogeneous object. The incident
intensity needs to be known and for inhomogeneous objects we need many
scans to determine μ(x,y).

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The detectors see the forward
projected x-rays and measure
the intensity, given that the x-ray
intensity without the body
present is known.

The intensity Ni written as sum


of attenuation coefficients along
a given x-ray path.

This generates a shade of gray


and a number associated with
this shade.

Then the detector changes angles


and the process repeats.
The images are reconstructed by a method called back projection, or tracing
backwards along the x-rays forward path to reconstruct the image and
calculating the absorption due to a localized region. This a mathematically
tedious process, but is handled easily with computers. 27
• The top scan we see that there are lighter and
darker regions somewhere in it, but we don't
know whether the light/dark regions is high,
low, or in the middle. In other words, we know
where the light region is horizontally but not
vertically.

• So by stretching it out we're kind of saying,


"We don't know where the light spot is
vertically, so for now give it all vertical values!”

• Now do a vertical scan and now we've taken


the light/dark spots whose location we know
vertically and "smeared" it out across all
horizontal positions.
• You can see where the light areas cross and it gets even more light there
and we can start to form an image.
• By "adding" more shadows medium light lines would eventually
disappear and we’d have a more complete and higher resolution image.
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Computed Tomography
- Hounsfield Units or CT numbers
• CT numbers (or Hounsfield units) represent the percent difference between
the x-ray attenuation coefficient for a voxel and that of water multiplied by a
constant.

• Water has a CT number of zero and the numbers can be positive or negative
depending on the absorption coefficient.

• This is how we assign a shade of gray, and 1000 is just a scaling factor set by
the CT manufacturer.

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Computed Tomography- Advantages & Disadvantages

Advantages:
• Desired image detail is obtained
• Fast image rendering
• Filters may sharpen or smooth reconstructed images
• Raw data may be reconstructed post-acquisition with a variety
of filters

Disadvantages
• Multiple reconstructions may be required if significant detail is
required from areas of the study that contain bone and soft
tissue
• Need for quality detectors and computer software
• X-ray exposure

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[Link]

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