DocumentCode :
781484
Title :
Dynamic X-ray computed tomography
Author :
Bonnet, Stéphane ; Koenig, Anne ; Roux, Sébastien ; Hugonnard, Patrick ; Guillemaud, Régis ; Grangeat, Pierre
Author_Institution :
Dept. Syst.s pour l´´Inf. et la Sante, Lab. d´´Electronique et de Technol. de l´´Inf., Grenoble, France
Volume :
91
Issue :
10
fYear :
2003
Firstpage :
1574
Lastpage :
1587
Abstract :
Dynamic computed tomography (CT) imaging aims at reconstructing image sequences where the dynamic nature of the living human body is of primary interest. The main applications concerned are image-guided interventional procedures, functional studies and cardiac imaging. The introduction of ultra-fast rotating gantries along with multi-row detectors and in near future area detectors allows huge progress toward the imaging of moving organs with low-contrast resolution. This paper gives an overview of the different concepts used in dynamic CT. A new reconstruction algorithm based on a voxel-specific dynamic evolution compensation is also presented. It provides four-dimensional image sequences with accurate spatio-temporal information, where each frame is reconstructed using a long-scan acquisition mode on several half-turns. In the same time, this technique permits to reduce the dose delivered per rotation while keeping the same signal to noise ratio for every frame using an adaptive motion-compensated temporal averaging. Results are illustrated on simulated data.
Keywords :
X-ray detection; adaptive signal processing; biological organs; cardiology; computerised tomography; dosimetry; image reconstruction; image resolution; image sequences; medical image processing; motion compensation; reviews; spatiotemporal phenomena; accurate spatio-temporal information; adaptive motion-compensated temporal averaging; area detectors; cardiac imaging; dynamic CT; dynamic X-ray computed tomography; four-dimensional image sequences; functional studies; half-turns; image sequence reconstruction; image-guided interventional procedures; living human body; long-scan acquisition mode; low-contrast resolution; moving organ imaging; multi-row detectors; overview; reconstruction algorithm; signal to noise ratio; simulated data; ultra-fast rotating gantries; voxel-specific dynamic evolution compensation; Computed tomography; Detectors; Humans; Image reconstruction; Image resolution; Image sequences; Optical imaging; Reconstruction algorithms; Signal to noise ratio; X-ray imaging;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9219
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JPROC.2003.817868
Filename :
1232194
Link To Document :
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