Title: Fluoroscopy
1Fluoroscopy
2Real-Time Imaging
- Fluoroscopy is an imaging procedure that allows
real-time x-ray viewing of the patient with high
temporal resolution - Use TV technology, which provides 30 frames per
second imaging - Allows acquisition of a real-time digital
sequence of images (digital video), that can be
played back as a movie loop - Cine cameras offer up to 120 frame per second
acquisition rates using 35-mm cine film. Digital
cine also available
3Fluoroscope Imaging Chain
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 232.
4The Image Intensifier
- There are 4 principal components of an II
-
- (a) a vacuum bottle to keep the air out
- (b) an input layer that converts the x-ray signal
to electrons - (c) electronic lenses that focus the electrons,
and - (d) an output phosphor that converts the
accelerated electrons into visible light
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 233.
5The Image Intensifier
CCD TV CAMERA
MIRROR
ADC
LENS
OUTPUT PHOSPHOR
APERTURE
FOCUSING ELECTRODES
DISPLAY
ELECTRONS
PHOTO-CATHODE LAYER
INPUT PHOSPHOR ...CsI
X-RAYS
6The Input Screen
- The input screen of the II consists of 4
different layers -
- (a) vacuum window, a 1 mm aluminum window that is
part of the vacuum bottle - keeps the air out of the II, and its curvature is
designed to withstand the force of the air
pressing against it - a vacuum is necessary in all devices in which
electrons are accelerated across open space
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 233.
7The Input Screen
- The input screen of the II consists of 4
different layers -
- (b) support layer, which is strong enough to
support the input phosphor and photocathode
layers, but thin enough to allow most x-rays to
pass through it - 0.5 mm of aluminum, is the first component in the
electronic lens system, and its curvature is
designed for accurate electronic focusing
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 233.
8The Input Screen
- The input screen of the II consists of 4
different layers -
- (c) input phosphor, whose function is to absorb
the x-rays and convert their energy into visible
light - cesium iodide (CsI) is used
- long, needle-like crystals which function as
light pipes, channeling the visible light toward
the photochathode with minimal lateral spreading - 400 mm tall, 5 mm in diameter
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 233.
9The Input Screen
- The input screen of the II consists of 4
different layers -
- (d) photocathode is a thin layer of antimony and
alkali metals that emits electrons when struck by
visible light - 10 to 20 conversion efficiency
-
- 23 to 35 cm diameter input image (FOV)
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 233.
10Input Phosphor Energy Conversion
Aluminum Support
Photocathode
CsI Needles
Figure courtesy from Jonathan Tucker, Brooke Army
Medical Center, SA, TX
11Input Phosphor Energy Conversion
60 keV X-Ray
Aluminum Support
Photocathode
Figure courtesy from Jonathan Tucker, Brooke Army
Medical Center, SA, TX
CsI Needles
12Input Phosphor Energy Conversion
Aluminum Support
3,000 light photons ? 420 nm
Photocathode
Figure courtesy from Jonathan Tucker, Brooke Army
Medical Center, SA, TX
CsI Needles
13Input Phosphor Energy Conversion
Aluminum Support
Photocathode
400 electrons
To Anode
CsI Needles
Figure courtesy from Jonathan Tucker, Brooke Army
Medical Center, SA, TX
14Electron Optics
- Electrons are accelerated by an electric field
- Energy of each electron is substantially
increased and this gives rise to electron gain - Focusing is achieved using an electronic lens,
which requires the input screen to be a curved
surface, and this results in unavoidable
pincushion distortion of the image -
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 235.
15Electron Optics
- The G1, G2, G3 electrodes along with the input
screen and the anode near the output phosphor
comprise the five-component electronic lens
system of the II - The electrons under the influence of the 25K to
35K V electric field, are accelerated and arrive
at the anode with high velocity and considerable
kinetic energy - After penetrating the very thin anode, the
energetic electrons strike the output phosphor -
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 235.
16The Output Phosphor
- The output phosphor is made of zinc cadmium
sulfide - Anode is very thin coating of aluminum on the
vacuum side of the output phosphor, which is
electrically conductive to carry away the
electrons once they deposit their energy in the
phosphor - Each electron causes the emission of
approximately 1000 light photons from the output
phosphor - 2.5 cm diameter output phosphor
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 235.
17The Output Phosphor
- The reduction in image diameter leads to
amplification (analogy magnifying glass and
sunlight) -
- Minification gain of an II is simply the ratio of
the area of the input phosphor to that of the
output phosphor, e.g., 9 input phosphor, 1
output phosphor, area is square of the diameter
ratio, minification gain is 81
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 235.
18The Output Phosphor
- The output phosphor is coated right onto the
output window - Some fraction of the light emitted by the output
phosphor is reflected at the glass window - Light bouncing around the output window is called
veiling glare, and can reduce image contrast
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 235.
19Image Intensifier PerformanceConversion Factor
Light out of image intensifier (cd/m2)
Conversion Factor
Exposure rate into image intensifier (mR/sec)
- Defined as a measure of the gain of an image
intensifier - ratio of light output to exposure rate input
- 100 to 200 for new image intensifier
- Degrades over time, ultimately can lead to II
replacement
20Image Intensifier PerformanceBrightness Gain
- BG minification gain x electronic gain (flux
gain) - Minification gain increase in image brightness
that results from reduction in image size from
the input phosphor to output phosphor size - (di/do)2, di is input diameter which varies, do
is output diameter typically 2.5 cm - For 30 cm (12) II, minification gain 144
21Image Intensifier PerformanceBrightness Gain
- BG minification gain x electronic gain (flux
gain) - Electronic gain or flux gain is typically 50
- The brightness gain therefore ranges from about
2,500 7,000 - As the effective diameter of the input phosphor
decreases (magnification increases), the
brightness gain decreases
22Field of View/Magnification
- FOV specifies the size of the input phosphor of
the image intensifier - Different sizes 23 cm (9), 30 cm (12), 35 cm
(14), 40 cm (16) FOV - Magnification is accomplished electronically
using electronic focusing that projects part of
the input layer onto the output phosphor - Since brightness gain decreases in mag. mode, the
x-ray exposure rate is boosted. (12/9)2 1.8,
(12/7)2 2.9 -
-
-
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 237.
23NON-MAGNIFY MODE OF I.I.
OUTPUT IMAGE
ALL OF INPUT SURFACE USED TO GATHER X-RAYS
24MAGNIFIED MODE OF IMAGE INTENSIFIER
OUTPUT IMAGE
LESS IMAGED ANATOMY IS EXPANDED OVER THE SAME
OUTPUT SURFACE AND LOOKS MAGNIFIED
ONLY A PORTION OF INPUT SURFACE USED TO GATHER
X-RAYS
25Magnification
LARGE NON-MAG FoV e.g., 12 INCH
SMALL, MAG FoV e.g., 6 INCH
26Pincushion Distortion
27Optical Coupling
- Parallel rays of light enter the optical chamber,
are focused by lenses, and strike the video
camera where an electronic image in produced -
- A partially silvered mirror is used to shunt the
light emitted by the image intensifier to an
accessory port
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 239.
28Video Camera
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 240.
29Video Camera
- Analog video systems typically have 30 frames/sec
operation, but they work in an interlaced fashion
to reduce flicker, the perception of the image
flashing on and off - The human eye-brain system can detect temporal
fluctuations slower than about 47 images/sec, and
therefore at 30 frames/sec flicker would be
perceptible - With interlaced systems, each frame is composed
of two fields and each field is refreshed at a
rate of 60 times per second, which is fast enough
to avoid perception of flicker
30Lag
- Lag means that each new TV image actually
contains residual image information from the last
several frames - Lag is good and bad
- Lag acts to smooth the quantum noise in the
image, but can also cause motion blurring
31Lag
- Effect of camera lag. Angiogram of a rapidly
moving coronary artery shows a trailing "ghost"
due to excessive camera lag (the direction of
travel is from right to left).
32Video Resolution
- Spatial resolution of a video in the vertical
direction (top to bottom) of the TV image is
governed by the number of scan lines - By convention, 525 lines are used in N. America
for TV - 490 lines usable
- In the early days of TV, a man named Kell
determined that about 70 of theoretical video
resolution is appreciated visually, and this
psychophysical effect is now called the Kell
factor - 490 x 0.7 343 lines or 172 line pairs useful
for resolution - For 9 field, resolution 172 lp/229 mm 0.75
lp/mm - 17 cm or 7 field, resolution is 1.0 lp/mm
- 12 cm or 5 field, resolution is 1.4 lp/mm
33Video Resolution
- The horizontal resolution is determined by how
fast the video electronics can respond to changes
in light intensity - This is influenced by the camera, the cable, the
monitor but the horizontal resolution is governed
by the bandwidth of the system - The time necessary to scan each video line (525
lines at 30 frame/sec) is 63 msec - 11 msec required for horizontal retrace, 52 msec
available - To achieve 172 cycles in 52 msec, the bandwidth
required is 172 cycles/52 x 10-6 sec 3.3 x 106
cycles/sec 3.3 MHz - Higher bandwidths are required for high-line
video systems
34TELEVISION IMAGE
HORIZONTAL DIRECTION
RASTER LINE
VERTICALDIRECTION
TV LINES ARE COMPOSED OF DOTS
35INTERLACED SCANS
36INTERLACED SCANS
37TYPICAL MEASURED RESOLUTION
1023 LINE T.V.
- FoV T.V. I.I. CINE
- 9 INCH 1.8-2.2 LP/mm 2.7-3.2 LP/mm
- 6 INCH 2.5-2.8 LP/mm 3.7-4.5 LP/mm
- 4.5 INCH 3.2-3.7 LP/mm 5.0-6.0 LP/mm
38Summary
- Fluoroscopy is a live imaging procedure
- Image Intensifier main component and consists of
the input phosphor, electronic lens system and
output phosphor - Input phosphor Cesium Iodide, converts x-rays
to light - Photocathode converts light into electrons
- Output phosphor Zinc cadmium sulphide, converts
electrons into light - Artifacts pincushion distortion, veiling glare,
lag - Brightness gain minification gain x electronic
(flux) gain - Several magnification modes available, typically
exposure rate increases with magnification - Video camera produces the electronic image which
we see on the TV monitor - Use interlaced scanning to avoid flicker
- Horizontal (determined by bandwidth) and vertical
(determined by the number of scan lines) video
resolution
39Flat Panel Digital Fluoroscopy
- Flat panel devices are thin film transistor (TFT)
arrays that are rectangular in format and are
used as x-ray detectors - CsI, a scintillator is used to convert the
incident x-ray beam into light - TFT systems have a photodiode at each detector
element which converts light energy to an
electronic signal - Flat panel detectors would replace the image
intensifier, video camera, and other peripheral
devices
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 242.
40DIAGRAM OF GE FLAT PANEL IMAGE DETECTORS
41FLAT PANEL-LIGHT SENSOR
Very High Fill Factor
Fill Factor
FROM GE
42Peripheral Equipment
- Photo-spot camera
- used to generate images on photographic film,
100-mm cut film or 105-mm roll film - full resolution of the II system, hardly seen
nowadays - Digital photo-spot
- high resolution, slow-scan TV cameras in which
the TV signal is digitized and stored in computer
memory - Or CCD cameras with 10242 or 20482 pixel formats
- near-instantaneous viewing of the image on a
video monitor - allows the fluoroscopist to put together a number
of images to demonstrate the anatomy important to
the diagnosis - digital images can be printed on a laser imager
43Peripheral Equipment
- Spot-film devices
- attaches to the front of the II, and produces
conventional radiographic screen-film images - better resolution than images produced by II
- Cine-radiography cameras
- attaches to a port and can record a very rapid
sequence of images on 35-mm film - used in cardiac studies, 30 frames/sec to 120
frames/sec or higher - uses very short radiographic pulses
- digital cine are typically CCD-based cameras that
produce a rapid sequence of digital images
instead of film sequence
44Fluoroscopy Modes of Operation
- Continuous fluoroscopy
- continuously on x-ray beam, 0.5 4 mA or higher
- display at 30 frames/sec, 33 msec/frame
acquisition time - blurring present due to patient motion,
acceptable - 10 R/min is the maximum legal limit
- High dose rate fluoroscopy
- specially activated fluoroscopy
- 20 R/min is the maximum legal limit
- audible signal required to sound
- used for obese patients
45Fluoroscopy Modes of Operation
- Pulsed fluoro
- series of short x-ray pulses, 30 pulses at 10
msec per pulse - exposure time is shorter, reduces blurring from
patient motion - Can be used where object motion is high, e.g.,
positioning catheters in highly pulsatile vessels
- 15 frames/sec, 7.5 frames/sec also available
- Variable frame pulsed fluoroscopy is instrumental
in reducing dose - Ex., initially guiding the catheter up from the
femoral artery to the aortic arch does not
require high temporal resolution and 7.5
frames/sec could potentially be used instead of
30 frames/sec - 7.5 frames/sec instead of 30 frames/sec, dose
savings of (7.5/30) 25
46Frame Averaging
- Fluoroscopy systems provide excellent temporal
resolution - However, fluoroscopy images are relatively noisy,
and in some applications it is beneficial to
compromise temporal resolution for lower noise
images - This can be achieved by averaging a series of
images or frames - Real-time averaging in the computer memory for
display - Can cause noticeable image lag but noise in image
is reduced as well - Could also reduce dose in some circumstances
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 245.
47Last Frame Hold
- Last-frame hold
- when the fluoroscopist takes his or her foot off
the fluoroscopy pedal, rather than seeing a blank
monitor, last-frame-hold enables the last live
image to be shown continuously - useful at training institutions
- no unnecessary radiation used on patient
48Road-Mapping
- Road Mapping
- software-enhanced variant of the last-frame-hold
feature - side-by-side video monitors, one shows captured
image, the other live image - In angiography, subtracted image can be overlayed
over live image to give the angiographer a
vascular road map right on the fluoroscopy
image - is useful for advancing catheters through
tortuous vessels
49Automatic Brightness Control
- The purpose of the automatic brightness control
(ABC) is to keep the brightness of the image
constant at monitor -
- It does this by regulating the x-ray exposure
rate (control kVp, mA or both)
- Automatic brightness control triggers with
changing patient size and field modes
50Automatic Brightness Control
- The top curve increases mA more rapidly than kV
as a function of patient thickness, and preserves
subject contrast at the expense of higher dose - The bottom curve increases kV more rapidly than
mA with increasing patient thickness, and results
in lower dose, but lower contrast as well
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 247.
51Image Quality Spatial Resolution
- A 2D image really has 3 dimensions height,
width, and gray scale - Height and width are spatial and have units such
as millimeters - The classic notion of spatial resolution is the
ability of an image system to distinctly depict
two objects as they become smaller and closer
together - The closer together they are, with the image
still showing them as separate objects, the
better the spatial resolution - At some point, the two objects become so close
that they appear as one, and at this point,
spatial resolution is lost
52Image Quality Spatial Resolution
- The spatial domain simply refers to the two
spatial dimensions of an image, width
(x-dimension) and length (y-dimension) - Another useful way to express the resolution of
an imaging system is to make use of the spatial
frequency domain -
- F (line pairs/mm or cycles/mm) 1/2?, where ? is
the size of the object (mm) - Smaller objects (small ?) correspond to higher
spatial frequencies and larger objects (large ?)
correspond to lower spatial frequencies -
- So, objects that are
- 0.36 mm correspond to 1.4 lp/mm
- 0.19 mm corresponds to 2.7 lp/mm
- 1 mm correspond to 0.5 lp/mm
53Image Quality Spatial Resolution
- Spatial frequency is just another way of thinking
of object size - A device used to measure the spatial resolution
is the bar pattern
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 249.
54Image Quality Spatial Resolution
- The modulation transfer function, MTF of an image
system is a very complete description of the
resolution properties of an imaging system - The MTF illustrates the fraction (or percentage)
of an objects contrast that is recorded by the
imaging system, as a function of the size (i.e.,
spatial frequency) of the object - The limiting spatial resolution is the size of
the smallest object that an imaging system can
resolve - The limiting resolution of modern image
intensifiers is between 4 and 5 cycles/mm
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 248.
55Image QualityContrast Resolution
- The ability to detect a low-contrast object on an
image is highly related to how much noise
(quantum noise and otherwise) there is in the
image - The ability to visualize low-contrast objects is
the essence of contrast resolution. Better
contrast resolution implies that more subtle
objects can be routinely seen on the image - The contrast resolution of fluoroscopy is low by
comparison to radiography, because the low
exposure levels produce images with relatively
low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)
56Image QualityContrast Resolution
- Contrast resolution is increased when higher
exposure rates are used, but the disadvantage is
more radiation dose to the patient - Fluoroscopic systems with different dose settings
allow the user flexibility from patient to
patient to adjust the compromise between contrast
resolution and patient exposure
57Noise and Contrast
- Comparison of x-ray noise amplitudes in coronary
angiograms acquired at fluoroscopic (2 µR per
frame) (a) and angiographic (16 µR per frame) (b)
exposure levels.
58Noise and Contrast
- 16 µR per frame. Note improved resolution and
contrast due to the higher exposure.
59Digital Image Quality
- Effect of Matrix Size.
- 512 x 512 matrix
60Digital Image Quality
- Effect of Matrix Size.
- 256 x 256 matrix
61Digital Image Quality
- Effect of Matrix Size.
- 128 x 128 matrix
62Digital Image Quality
- Effect of Matrix Size.
- 64 x 64 matrix
63Digital Image Quality
- Gray Levels at a constant 512 x 512 matrix size.
- 256 Grey Levels (8 bit)
64Digital Image Quality
- Gray Levels at a constant 512 x 512 matrix size.
- 4 Grey Levels (2 bits)
65Digital Image Quality
- Gray Levels at a constant 512 x 512 matrix size.
- 8 Grey Levels (3 bits)
66Image QualityTemporal Resolution
- Fluoroscopy has excellent temporal resolution,
that is over time - Blurring in the time domain is typically called
image lag - Lag implies that a fraction of the image data
from one frame carries over into the next frame - Video cameras such as the vidicon demonstrate a
fair amount of lag
67Image QualityTemporal Resolution
- Lag in general is undesirable, beneficial for DSA
- Frame averaging improves contrast resolution at
the expense of temporal resolution - With DSA and digital cine, cameras with low-lag
performance (plumbicons or CCD cameras) are used
to maintain temporal resolution
68Fluoroscopy Suites
- Gastrointestinal Suites
- R and F room, large table that can be rotated
from horizontal to vertical to put the patient in
a head-down or head-up position - II above or under the table, spot film device
usually there -
- Remote Fluoroscopy Rooms
- Designed for remote operation by the radiologist
- Tube above table, II under table
- Reduce dose to the physician and no lead apron
needed
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 250.
69Fluoroscopy Suites
- Peripheral Angiography Suites
- Table floats, allows patient to be moved from
side to side and head to toe - C-arm or U-arm configuration
- 30 to 40 cm image intensifier used
- Power injectors are normally ceiling- or
table-mounted -
- Cardiology Catheterization Suite
- Similar to angiography suite, 23 cm II used to
permit more tilt in cranial caudal direction - Cine cameras used, biplane rooms common
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 250.
70Fluoroscopy Suites
- Biplane Angiographic Systems
- Two complete x-ray tube/II systems used, PA and
Lateral - Simultaneous acquisition of 2 views allows a
reduction of the volume of contrast media
injected in patient -
- Portable Fluoroscopy- C Arms
- C-Arm devices with an x-ray tube placed opposite
from the II - 18-cm (7-inch) and 23-cm (9-inch) and several
other field sizes available - Operating rooms and ICUs
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 250.
71Radiation Dose
- Patient Dose
- The maximum exposure rate permitted in the US is
governed by the Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR), and is overseen by the Center for Devices
and Radiological Health (CDRH), a branch of the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) -
- The maximum legal entrance exposure rate for
normal fluoroscopy to the patient is 10 R/min -
- For specially activated fluoroscopy, the maximum
exposure rate allowable is 20 R/min
72Radiation Dose
- Patient Dose
-
- Typical entrance exposure rates for fluoroscopic
imaging are - About 1 to 2 R/min for thin (10-cm) body parts
- 3 to 5 R/min for the average patient
- 8 to 10 R/min for the heavy patient
-
- Maximum dose at 120 kVp for most vendors
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 252.
73Dose to Personnel
- Rule of Thumb standing 1 m from the patient, the
fluoroscopist receives from scattered radiation
(on the outside of apron) approximately 1/1,000
of the exposure incident upon the patient -
- The scatter field incident upon the radiologist
while performing a fluoroscopic procedure is
shown -
- A radiologist of average height, 178 cm (510)
is shown overlaid on the graph and key anatomic
levels are indicated
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 253.
74Dose to Personnel
- The dose rate as a function of height above the
floor in the room is shown for 6 different
distances D, representing the distance between
the edge of the patient and the radiologist -
- 80 kVp beam and 20 cm patient thickness assumed
for calculation -
- Roentgen-area product (RAP) or dose-area product
(DAP) meters can be used to provide real-time
estimate of the amount of radiation the patient
has received
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 253.
75Additional Reading
- Additional topics on digital fluoroscopy and
digital subtraction angiography can be found at
the RSNA Education Portal. - http//www.rsna.org/education/archive/aapm/toc.htm
lfluoroscopy