Title: Development of the Computed Tomography (CT) Scanner
1- Development of the Computed Tomography (CT)
Scanner
Sue Edyvean St. Georges Hospital, London
2Computed Tomography
- Images slices through the patient
- Graphia to write, to draw
- Tomos cut, incision, section
- Computed determined by mathematical methods
3Development of the CT Scanner
- CT scanner developed at EMI Medical by Godfrey
Hounsfield
4Development of the CT Scanner
- Prototype installed at Atkinson Morleys
Hospital, Wimbledon, London
5Development of the CT Scanner
- Support of Dr James Ambrose, Neuro-radiologist AMH
6Development of the CT Scanner
- 1st clinical scan 1st October 1971
7British Journal of Radiology 1973 three linked
papers
- Godfrey Hounsfield EMI, inventor of clinical CT
1971 (design) - 1979 Nobel prize (jointly with Cormack)
-
- Dr. James Ambrose Neuroradiologist AMH
(clinical) - Standing ovation at RSNA 1972
-
- Dr. BJ Perry Head of Medical Physics SGH/AMH
(radiation) - Dosimetry and image quality, measurements and
methods
Godfrey Hounsfield
James Ambrose John Perry
(GH died Aug 12th 2004, JA died March 12th 2006)
8CT scanner development 1971
- 2 x (8 10 mm), first dual slice scanner,
- 80 x 80 matrix
- 4 min per rotation
9Early Clinical Images - AMH Scanner
- Data tapes sent away overnight for image
reconstruction - Paper (CT numbers) or polaroid (Scan numbers 200
and 215, images A and B refer to the two slices
imaged simultaneously)
10CT scanner development 1971
- Scanner is now in the science museum
11Godfrey Hounsfield Nobel Speech 1979
Fig. 14 shows a picture from the experiment. The
heart chambers can be discerned by a little
intravenous injected contrast media.
A further promising field may be the detection
of the coronary arteries. . It may be possible
to detect these under special conditions of
scanning.
122010 Scanning the heart has become a reality
SOMATOM Definition Flash Temp res. 75 ms Coll.
128 x 0.6 mm Spatial res. 0.33 mm 350 ms for 149
mm Rotation 0.28 s 100 kV, 290 mAs/
rotation 0.90 mSv
13- Development of the CT Scanner
14Early Clinical Images
1st ever 3-D CT clinical images. Carried out in
AMH physics Dept.