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Computed Tomography Data Acquisition
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Data Collection Basics
Patient X-ray source & detector must be in & stay in alignment Beam moves (scans) around patient many transmission measurements X-Ray beams
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Data Collection Basics
Pre-patient beam collimated to pass only through slice of interest shaped by special bow tie filter for uniformity Patient Filter
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Data Collection Basics (cont)
Beam attenuated by patient Transmitted photons detected by scanner Detected photon intensity converted to electrical signal (analog) Electrical signal converted to digital value A to D converter Digital value sent to reconstruction computer
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CT “Ray” That part of beam falling onto a single detector Ray
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Each CT Ray attenuated by patient projected onto one detector
detector produces electrical signal produces single data sample
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CT View # of simultaneously collected rays
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Acquisition Geometries
Pencil Beam Fan Beam Spiral Multislice
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Spiral Geometry X-ray tube rotates continuously around patient
Detector Slip Rings Interconnect Wiring X-ray tube rotates continuously around patient Patient continuously transported through gantry No physical wiring between gantry & x-ray tube Requires “Slip Ring” technology
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What’s a Slip Ring?
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High Voltage Transformer
Rotating Generator Primary Voltage Secondary Voltage Incoming AC Power X-Ray Generator High Voltage Transformer X-Ray Tube Stationary Rotating Slip Rings
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Spiral CT Advantages Faster scan times
minimal interscan delays no need to stop / reverse direction of rotation Slip rings allow continuous rotation of tube & detector Continuous acquisition protocols possible
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Special Considerations for Slip Ring Scanners
continuous scanning means Heat added to tube faster No cooling between slices Need more heat capacity faster cooling huge tubes
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CT Beam Filtration Hardens beam
preferentially removes low-energy radiation Removes greater fraction of low-energy photons than high energy photons reduces patient exposure Attempts to produce uniform intensity & beam hardening across beam cross section Patient Filter
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CT Detector Technology: Desirable Characteristics
High efficiency Quick response time High dynamic range Stability
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CT Detector Efficiency
Ability to absorb & convert x-ray photons to electrical signals
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Efficiency Components
Capture efficiency (0-1) fraction of beam incident on active detector Absorption efficiency (0-1) fraction of photons incident on the detector which are absorbed Conversion efficiency (0-1) fraction of absorbed energy which produce signal
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Overall Detector Efficiency (Also 0-1)
capture efficiency X absorption efficiency X conversion efficiency
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Capture Efficiency Fraction of beam incident on active detector
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Absorption Efficiency
Fraction of photons incident on the detector which are absorbed Depends upon detector’s atomic # density size thickness Depends on beam spectrum capture efficiency X absorption efficiency X conversion efficiency
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Conversion Efficiency
Ability to convert x-ray energy to light GE “Gemstone Detector” made of garnet
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Conversion Efficiency
Ability to convert x-ray energy to light Siemens UltraFastCeramic (UFC) CT Detector Proprietary Fast afterglow decay UFC Plate UFC Material
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Response Time Minimum time after detection of 1st event until detector can detect 2nd event If time between events < response time, 2nd event may not be detected Shorter response time better
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Stability Consistency of detector signal over time
Short term Long term The less stable, the more frequently calibration required
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Dynamic Range Ratio of largest to smallest signal which can be faithfully detected Ability to faithfully detect large range of intensities Typical dynamic range: 1,000,000:1 much better than film
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Solid State Detectors Crystal converts incident x-rays to light
Photodiode semiconductor current proportional to light Photodiode Semiconductor Electrical Signal X-Rays Light
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Solid State Detectors Output electrical signal amplified
Fast response time Large dynamic range Almost 100% conversion & photon capture efficiency Scintillation materials cadmium tungstate high-purity ceramic material
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Detector Electronics From Detector
Increases signal strength for later processing Pre-Amplifier Compresses dynamic range; Converts transmission intensity into attenuation data Logarithmic Amplifier Analog to Digital Converter To Computer
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Logarithms Log10x = ? means 10? = x? logarithms are exponents
log10x is exponent to which 10 is raised to get x log10100 =2 because 102=100
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Logarithms 100,000 10,000 1,000 100 10 1 5 4 3 2 Input Logarithm
Input Logarithm Using logarithms the difference between 10,000 and 100,000 is the same as the difference between 10 and 100
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Compression 100,000 10,000 1,000 100 10 1 5 4 3 2 Input Logarithm
1000 Hard to distinguish between 1 & 10 here 100,000 10,000 1,000 100 10 1 5 4 3 2 Input Logarithm 3 = log 1000 2 =log 100 Difference between 1 & 10 the same as between 100 & 1000 1 = log 10 0 = log 10 Logarithms stretch low end of scale; compress high end 1 10 100 1000
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Logarithmic Amplifier
accepts widely varying input takes logarithm of input amplifies logarithm logarithm output dynamic range now appropriate for A/D conversion Input Logarithm 100,000 5 10,000 4 1,000 3 100 2 10 1 1
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Improving Quality & Detection
Geometry Smaller detectors Smaller focal spot Larger focus-detector distance Smaller patient-detector distance Thinner slices less patient variation over slice thickness distance
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