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
fDate :
4/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
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;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on