DocumentCode
850960
Title
Moving beam helical CT scanning
Author
Crawford, Carl R. ; King, Kevin F. ; Toth, Thomas L. ; Hu, Hui
Author_Institution
Analogic Corp., Peabody, MA, USA
Volume
15
Issue
2
fYear
1996
fDate
4/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
188
Lastpage
196
Abstract
Images generated with helical scanning are degraded by partial volume artifacts caused by an increased slice thickness when compared to conventional computed tomography (CT) scanning. The slice thickness for a helical scan is proportional to the sum of the thickness of the fan of radiation and the distance the patient moves during data acquisition. The authors present a method called moving beam helical scanning (MBHS) which significantly reduces the partial volume artifacts caused by helical scanning. The key element of MBHS is a rotatable collimator that is placed between the X-ray source and the patient. As the patient is translated, the collimator is used to aim the fan on a fixed position in the patient. Once sufficient data are obtained to reconstruct a slice, the collimator is quickly reset to scan a target in the next slice. The authors examined the performance of MBHS by scanning wires and phantoms on a modified scanner. The full-width-at-tenth-maximum of the slice profile at iso-center for MBHS is identical to conventional CT versus a 59% increase for conventional helical scanning. It is concluded that MBHS can be used to obtain the scan rate advantages of helical scanning with image quality comparable to conventional scanning
Keywords
computerised tomography; image reconstruction; medical image processing; X-ray source; full-width-at-tenth-maximum; image quality; medical diagnostic imaging; modified scanner; moving beam helical CT scanning; partial volume artifacts; patient movement distance; phantoms; radiation fan; rotatable collimator; slice reconstruction; slice thickness; wires; Collimators; Computed tomography; Data acquisition; Degradation; Delay; Image quality; Image reconstruction; Imaging phantoms; Spirals; Wires;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0062
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/42.491420
Filename
491420
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