Title: COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
1COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
2OUTLINE
- TOMOGRAPHY DEFINITION
- WHY CT LIMITATIONS OF RADIOGRAPHY AND
TOMOGRAPHY - CT- BASIC PHYSICAL PRINCIPLE
- HISTORICAL TRAIL
- CT GENERATIONS
3Tomography From the Greek word tomos section.
The process for generating a tomogram, a
two-dimensional image of a section through a
three-dimensional object. Tomography achieves
this result by simply moving an x-ray source in
one direction as the x-ray film is moved in the
opposite direction during the exposure to sharpen
structures in the focal plane, while structures
away from the focal plane appear blurred.
4CONVENTIONAL RADIOGRAPHY HAS LIMITATIONS
- TWO DIMENSIONAL IMAGE WITH INFINITE DEPTH -
SUPERIMPOSITION OF UNDERLYING STRUCTURES (LATERAL
AND OBLIQUE VIEWS DONT SOLVE IT COMPLETELY). - INABILITY TO DEMONSTRATE SLIGHT DIFFERENCES IN
SUBJECT CONTRAST CHARACTERISTIC OF SOFT TISSUE.
5TOMOGRAPHY SOLUTION?
- CONVENTIONAL TOMOGRAPHY ATTEMPTED TO ELIMINATE
THE SUPERIMPOSITION PROBLEM BY BLURRING THE
STRUCTURES ABOVE AND BELOW THE TOMOGRAPHIC FOCAL
PLANE. - CONTRAST OF AN IMAGE CAN ALSO BE CHANGED BY
VARYING TOMOGRAPHIC ANGLE (DISTANCE OF A TUBE
TRAVEL) - MULTIDIRECTIONAL TUBE MOVEMENT MAKES THE BLURRING
OF UNWANTED STRUCTURES EVEN MORE EFFECTIVE.
6TOMOGRAPHY STILL LIMITED
- IMAGE BLURR PRESENT
- EXCESSIVE SCATTER RADIATION FILM FOG
7RADIOGRAPHY AND TOMOGRAPHY
- TISSUE DIFFERENCE SENSITIVITY
- 5-10
8CT GOALS
9CT EVOLUTION OF TERMS
COMPUTERIZED TRANSVERSE AXIAL TOMOGRAPHY
COMPUTER ASISSTED TOMOGRAPHY
COMPUTERIZED AXIAL TOMOGRAPHY
COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY
10FORMATION OF CT IMAGE
DATA AQUSITION
IMAGE RECONSTRUCTION
IMAGE DISPLAY, MANIPULATION, STORAGE COMMUNICATIO
NS RECORDING
11DATA ACQUISITION
- COLLECTION OF X-RAY PHOTONS TRANSMITTED THROUGH
THE PATIENT BY THE CT DETECTORS.
12DETECTORS
13IMAGE RECONSTRUCTION
- TRANSMISSION MEASUREMENTS COLLECTED BY THE CT
DETECTORS ARE SENT TO THE COMPUTER FOR THE
PROCESSING. COMPUTERS USES MATHEMATICAL ALGORITHM
TO RECONSTRUCT THE IMAGE.
14IMAGE DISPLAY, MANIPULATION, STORAGE,
COMMUNICATION.
- AFTER RECONSTRUCTION IMAGE CAN BE DISPLAYED ON
THE MONITOR - IMAGE CAN BE MANIPULATEDIMAGE CAN BE STORED ON
MOD OR CD. - DURING COMMUNICATION PHASE IMAGE MAY BE
TRANSMITTED TO A REMOTE LOCATION
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16Sir Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield CBE, FRS, (28
August 1919 12 August 2004) was an English
electrical engineer who shared the 1979 Nobel
Prize for Physiology or Medicine with Allan
McLeod Cormack for his part in developing the
diagnostic technique of X-ray computed tomography
(CT).
17CONSTRUCTION OF FIRST CT
- RADIATION SOURCE AMERICUM GAMMA SOURCE
- SCAN9 DAYS
- COMPUTER PROCESSING2.5 HOURS
- PICTURE PRODUCTION 1 DAY
18HOUNSFIELDS LATHE BED SCANNER
19DR.HOUNSFIELD DR. AMBROSE
- READINGS FROM SPECIMEN OF HUMAN BRAIN. TUMOR
FINDINGS APPARENT.
201972
- FIRST CLINICAL PROTOTYPE CT BRAIN SCANNER
- FIRST SCANS20 MIN.
- LATER REDUCED TO 4.5 MIN.
21CLINICALLY USEFUL CT SCANNER
22DR. HOUNSFIELD
- 1972 McROBERT AWARD
- 1979 NOBEL PRIZE
23ALLAN M. CORMACK
- 1979 NOBEL PRIZE SHARED WITH DR. HOUNSFIELD.
DEVELOPED SOLUTIONS TO MATHEMATICAL PROBLEMS IN
CT.
241974
- DR. ROBERT LEDLEY DEVELOPED THE FIRST WHOLE BODY
CT SCANNER .
25SCANNING DEVELOPMENT
26CT SCANNING GENERATIONS
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31HIGH SPPED CT V GENERATION ( CARDIVASCULAR CT)
32EBCT ( SIEMENS)
331990SPIRAL CT ( HELICAL) SLIP RING TECHNOLOGY
34CT SCANNING IN SPIRAL-HELICAL GEOMETRY BASED ON
SLIP RING TECHNOLOGY
Slip rings
35SCANNER POWER SUPPLY-SLIP RINGS DISK
361992
- DUAL SLICE CT HELICAL SCANNER
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381998
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