Title of article
An improved method for rapid objective measurement of gamma camera resolution
Author/Authors
Hander، Trish A. نويسنده , , Lancaster، Jack L. نويسنده , , McDavid، William نويسنده , , Kopp، David T. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
-2687
From page
2688
To page
0
Abstract
The introduction of multislice CT scanners and the associated dose increase compared to single and dual slice scanners has concerned many radiologists, health and medical physicists, as well as members of the regulatory community. Since multislice CT scanners are inherently post-patient collimated, they are less dose efficient than single slice CT scanners, which use prepatient collimation. The x-ray beam must be wide enough in the Z axis so that the beam remains on the detector in spite of typical movements due to thermal and mechanical flexing. We describe the x-ray beam tracking system that is employed on a GE LightSpeed QX/i® scanner to substantially reduce the multislice dose. The tracking system stabilizes the beam on the detector allowing a narrower x-ray exposure profile compared to the x-ray exposure profile without tracking. The tracking system measures the position of the beam every few milliseconds and continually repositions a source aperture to hold a narrow beam fixed on the detector. Using a standard LightSpeed QX/i® source collmnator and segmented detector, dose reductions of up to 40% were measured when tracking was employed. We also show that tracking has the potential to provide a dose efficiency approaching single slice scanners.
Keywords
gamma camera , spatial resolution , modulation transfer function , FWHM
Journal title
MEDICAL PHYSICS
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
MEDICAL PHYSICS
Record number
2086
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