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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