1. Field of the Invention
The present invention concerns an apparatus to acquire images with high-energy photons, of the type having a detector region acquiring images, with at least two radiation energy converters disposed in the beam path of the high-energy photons that act on the photons in different high-energy ranges and that transmit photons in the low-energy range to respective detector regions associated with the radiation energy converters.
2. Description of the Prior Art
An apparatus of the above type is known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,963,746.
From U.S. Pat. No. 6,343,111, it is known to x-ray (transirradiate) the body part to be examined of a patient with x-ray light at different energy ranges. Initially a first exposure with x-ray radiation is implemented at a first energy level, and then a second exposure is implemented with x-ray radiation at a second energy level. The second energy level is below the first energy level. Both exposures are acquired in digital form, and the data of both exposures are subtracted from one another in a complex image processing method.
The known apparatuses serve to acquire x-ray images of soft parts of a patient. For example, it can be of interest to examine the lungs of a patient for lung cancer. The classical x-ray technique is not suitable means for this, because the image of the bone structure of the ribcage dominates the x-ray image. By the acquisition of two images in different energy ranges of the x-ray radiation and a subsequent subtraction of the brightness values, it is in principle possible to eliminate the bone structures from the image, such that a high-detail and high-contrast image of the soft tissue of the patient results in the final image.
A disadvantage of the known method and apparatus is that a movement of the patient between the two acquisitions can not be prevented due to the respiration and heartbeats. The movement effects must therefore be eliminated by a mathematically complex image processing method. Shadows that can lead to artifacts in the finished image also enter in part into the image processing.
An object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus and a method of the above general type with which soft parts of a patient can be acquired in a simple manner.
The above object is achieved in accordance with the present invention by an apparatus for acquiring images using high-energy photons, having a detector region for acquiring the images and at least two radiation energy transducers disposed in a beam path of the high-energy photons for differently interacting with the photons in different high-energy ranges, for transmitting photons in a lower of said high-energy ranges to a portion of said detector region. The radiation energy transducers have respectively different spectral distributions for the photons in the lower of the high-energy ranges. The detector region has different areas thereof that respectively have a sensitivity tuned to the respective spectral distributions.
In the inventive apparatus, the radiation energy converters with different spectral distributions for the emitted photons in the low-energy range are disposed in the beam path in front of a detector having a detector surface that is energy-selective. The radiation energy transducer arranged in front of the detector convert the photons in different high-energy ranges into photons in different low-energy ranges and transmit these to the detector, where they are detected by respectively associated energy-selective regions.
Two exposures thus can simultaneously be made in different energy ranges with the apparatus. Since both exposures are implemented simultaneously, the movement of the patient plays no role in the subsequent subtraction of the two images. Complex image processing methods to compensate the motion of the patient are not needed in the inventive apparatus and the method.
An advantage of this embodiment is that only a single detector is necessary to acquire images in different energy ranges. The resolution of the acquired images in the respective energy ranges is lower in comparison to an apparatus with a number of detectors.
In
The x-ray pulse 3 is incident on a subject 6 to be examined, for example a body part of a patient. Depending on the structure of the subject 6, the high-energy photons 4 and the low-energy photons 5 in the x-ray pulse 3 are absorbed, and a shadow image of the absorption structure of the subject 6 is obtained from attenuated x-ray projections 7 penetrating the subject 6.
The attenuated x-rays 7 of the pulse 3 strike an x-ray detector 8 that has a scintillator 9 on the input side. The low-energy x-ray photons 5 are mostly absorbed in the scintillator 9. Upon absorption of an x-ray photon, the scintillator 9 emits optical photons 10 in an optical wavelength range that can be detected by a photodiode detector 11. The photodiode detector 11 is, for example, a detector in which a number of photodiodes made from amorphous silicon are arranged next to one another in an image area.
While the low-energy x-ray photons 5 are absorbed in the scintillator 9, the greater part of the high-energy x-ray photons pass through the scintillator 9 and the photodiode detector 11. The high-energy x-ray photons 4 are also transmitted through an x-ray filter 12. The high-energy x-ray photons that form the hard (penetrating) part of the x-ray pulses are absorbed in a scintillator 13 and converted into optical photons 14 that are detected by a photodiode detector 15. Like the photodiode detector 11, the photodiode detector 15 is a detector in which a plurality of photodiodes made from amorphous silicon are arranged next to one another.
The x-ray filter 12 can be a foil or a thin plate made of copper or aluminum.
Standard materials that are known to those skilled in the art can be used for the scintillators 9 and 13. They can be formed, respectively, of different materials or identical materials. In the latter case, the different absorption properties of the scintillators 9 and 13 are achieved by different thicknesses of the respective scintillator.
With the x-ray apparatus 1 shown in
A further exemplary embodiment of an energy-selective x-ray detector is shown in
As shown in
The exemplary embodiment of the x-ray detector 16 shown using
In
As for the x-ray detector 8 specified using
The apparatuses specified using
Although modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the art, it is the intention of the inventors to embody within the patent warranted hereon all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of their contribution to the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 25 335.1 | Jun 2003 | DE | national |