The invention relates to a computed tomography method in which an examination zone is irradiated along a circular trajectory by a fan-shaped radiation beam and in which a detector unit detects primary radiation and radiation which is coherently scattered in the examination zone. The invention also relates to a computer tomograph for carrying out such a method as well as to a computer program for controlling the computer tomograph.
In known methods of the kind set forth radiation which is coherently scattered in the examination zone is measured by a detector unit; the variation in space of the scatter intensity in the examination zone is then reconstructed from said measuring values. The reconstruction is usually carried out by means of iterative methods based on algebraic reconstruction techniques (ART) in which a reconstruction of the entire irradiated examination zone is necessary. A reconstruction of a part of the examination zone is not possible. Moreover, the iterative methods require a large amount of calculation work and hence lead to comparatively long reconstruction times. Alternative methods involve two-dimensional reconstruction techniques based on back projection; in these techniques such large distances exist or are assumed between the examination zone and the detector unit that an unambiguous relationship exists between the point of incidence of a scattered ray on the detector unit and the scatter angle. However, this geometry cannot be realized in medical applications, so that the two-dimensional back projection produces inaccurate results only.
Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to provide a method, a computer tomograph as well as a computer program which enable a faster reconstruction of the scatter intensity distribution in the examination zone while taking into account the actual geometry in medical applications.
In respect of the method this object is achieved in accordance with the invention by means of a computed tomography method which comprises the steps of
The scatter intensity is dependent not only on the material but also on the scatter angle and the wavelength of the radiation. A back projection in a volume defined by two linearly independent vectors of the rotational plane and a wave vector transfer, however, has the advantage that the scatter intensity thus parameterized is dependent exclusively on the scatter material, because the wave vector transfer is known to be proportional to the product of the inverse wavelength and the sine of half the scatter angle. In this context the scatter angle is the angle which is enclosed by the path of the scattered ray relative to the path that the ray would have followed in the absence of the scattering process.
The scattered rays have a curved shape in said volume. Taking the curved shape of the scattered rays into account for the back projection enhances the quality of the reconstructed scatter intensity distribution.
According to a preferred reconstruction method the measuring values are weighted prior to the back projection. Such weighting takes into account the fact that the effectiveness of the detector surface decreases as the scatter angle increases and also that the radiation density decreases as the distance between the point of incidence of the scattered ray on the detector unit and the scatter center increases. The effective detector surface is the detector surface projected in a plane perpendicular to the path of the detected ray. In another embodiment, weighting takes into account the fact that the radiation density decreases as the distance between the radiation source and the scatter center increases. The quality of the reconstructed scatter intensity distribution is enhanced when such effects are taken into account.
Another embodiment describes a preferred reconstruction method which requires less calculation work in comparison with other methods and offers a favorable image quality nevertheless.
A computer tomograph for carrying out the method in accordance with the invention is also disclosed.
Another embodiment defines a computer program for controlling a computer tomograph
The invention will be described in detail hereinafter on the basis of an embodiment and with reference to a drawing; therein:
The computer tomograph shown in
The fan beam 41 traverses a cylindrical examination zone 13 in which an object, for example, a patient on a patient table (both not shown) or also a technical object may be situated. After having traversed the examination zone 13, the fan beam 41 is incident on a detector unit 16 which is attached to the gantry 1 and comprises a measuring surface 17 with a plurality of detector elements arranged in the form of a matrix. The detector elements are arranged in rows and columns. The detector columns extend parallel to the axis of rotation 14. The detector rows are situated in planes which extend perpendicularly to the axis of rotation, that is, preferably on an arc of a circle around the radiation source S. However, they may also have a different shape, for example, the shape of an arc of a circle around the axis of rotation, or be rectilinear. Generally speaking, the detector rows comprise substantially more detector elements (for example, 1000) than the detector columns (for example, 16).
The fan beam 41, the examination zone 13 and the detector unit 16 are adapted to one another. In a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation 14 the dimensions of the fan beam 41 are chosen to be such that the examination zone 13 is fully irradiated and the length of the rows of the detector unit 16 is such that the fan beam 41 can be detected completely. The fan beam is incident on the central detector row (rows).
When a technical object is concerned instead of a patient, the object can be rotated during an examination while the radiation source S and the detector unit 16 remain stationary. The examination zone 13, or the object or the patient table, can be displaced parallel to the axis of rotation 14 by means of a motor 5. As an equivalent, however, the gantry could also be displaced in this direction.
When the motors 2 and 5 operate simultaneously, the radiation source S and the detector unit 16 describe a helical trajectory relative to the examination zone 13. However, when the motor 5 for the displacement in the direction of the axis of rotation 14 is stationary and the motor 2 rotates the gantry, a circular trajectory is obtained for the radiation source S and the detector 16 relative to the examination zone 13. Hereinafter only the circular trajectory will be considered.
The measuring values acquired by the detector unit 16 are applied to an image processing computer 10 which is connected to the detector unit 16, for example, via a wireless data transmission. The image processing computer 10 reconstructs the scatter intensity distribution in the examination zone 13 and reproduces it, for example, on a monitor 11. The two motors 2 and 5, the image processing computer 10, the radiation source S and the transfer of the measuring values from the detector unit 16 to the image processing computer 10 are controlled by a control unit 7.
In other embodiments the acquired measuring values can first be applied to one or more reconstruction computers for reconstruction, which reconstruction computers apply the reconstructed data to the image processing computer, for example, via an optical fiber cable.
After the initialization in the step 101, the gantry rotates at a constant angular speed. In the step 103 the radiation of the radiation source S is switched on so that the detector unit 16 can detect the primary and the scattered radiation from a plurality of angular positions. The detector element or elements at the center of each detector column detect essentially the primary radiation, whereas the scattered radiation (secondary radiation) is detected by the detector elements which are situated further nearer to the ends of a column.
The foregoing is diagrammatically indicated in
The scatter intensity is dependent inter alia on the energy of the scattered X-ray quantum. Therefore, the energy of the scattered X-ray quantum must either be measured, implying that the detector elements should be capable of measuring in an energy-resolved fashion, or use must be made of X-rays with quantum energies from an as small as possible range (monochromatic X-rays in the ideal case). There are various possibilities for minimizing the energy difference of the X-ray quanta relative to their energy:
In the step 105 the measuring values of the scattered radiation are normalized. The measuring values of each radiation source position of the scattered radiation are then divided by the measuring values of those primary rays which have caused the scattered rays.
In the step 107 the measuring values are subjected to a rebinning operation. Each measuring value is then associated with a line from the detector element in which the measuring value has been detected to the radiation source position. Thus, it is assumed that rays of the fictitious, conical radiation beam 42 have caused the measuring values without the rays having been scattered. Due to the rebinning operation the measuring values are resorted as if they had been measured by means of a different radiation source (a circular radiation source capable of emitting mutually parallel fan beams) and a different detector (a flat, rectangular virtual detector).
This will be described in detail with reference to
Moreover,
The fan beams 411 to 415 define a radiation beam 410 having a tent-like shape.
In the step 109 the measuring values of the scattered rays as produced by the rebinning are subjected to one-dimensional filtering with a factor which increases ramp-like as a function of the spatial frequency. To this end, each time successive values are taken into account in a direction parallel to the plane of rotation, that is, along a row of the virtual detector. This filtering is carried out along each row of the virtual detector for all projection angles.
In other embodiments the rebinning could also be omitted. It is known that in that case the filtering must be modified because the detector unit is curved, for example in the form of an arc around the radiation source or around the axis of rotation.
The filtered measuring values are subsequently used for the reconstruction of the scatter intensity distribution in the examination zone by back projection.
The back projection is carried out in a volume which is defined by the vectors {right arrow over (x)}, {right arrow over (y)} and {right arrow over (q)}, the unity vectors {right arrow over (x)} and {right arrow over (y)} being situated in the rotational plane and being oriented horizontally and vertically, respectively, whereas the wave vector transfer {right arrow over (q)} is oriented parallel to the axis of rotation. In other embodiments two other, linearly independent vectors of the plane of rotation can be used instead of the vectors {right arrow over (x)} and {right arrow over (y)}. As has already been stated, the amount of the wave vector transfer {right arrow over (q)} is proportional to the product of the inverse wavelength λ of the scattered X-ray quanta and the sine of one half of the scatter angle Θ:
q=(1/λ)sin(Θ/2) (1)
The scatter angle Θ can be determined on the basis of the arrangement of the examination zone 13 irradiated by the fan beam 41 and the detector unit 16 as shown in
Θ=arctan(a/d) (2)
Therein, d denotes the distance of a scatter center Si and a denotes the distance between the detector element Di and the foot 12 of the detector.
The detector Di detects rays which have been scattered at the angles Θ1<Θ<Θ2 in the examination zone 13 irradiated by the fan beam 41.
From the above two equations the following equation is obtained for small angles Θ
q≈a/(2dλ) (3)
The variation of the value of the wave vector transfer {right arrow over (q)} in dependence on the distance d between a scatter center and the foot of the detector thus has the shape of a hyperbola and hence is not linear (shown in
In the step 111 a voxel V(x,y,q) is determined within a selectable (x,y) zone (field of view or FOV) and within a range of values of the wave vector transfer {right arrow over (q)} resulting from the geometry of the computer tomograph.
In the step 113 the filtered values are multiplied by a weighting factor which corresponds to the reciprocal value of the cosine of the scatter angle. The decreasing effective detector surface as a function of an increasing scatter angle is thus taken into account. When said angle is small, the cosine of the angle is practically always 1, so that this weighting can be dispensed with. Moreover, the fact that the radiation density decreases as the distance between the scatter center increases, that is, the voxel V(x,y,q), and the point of incidence of the scattered ray on the measuring surface increases is taken into account by multiplying all measuring values for each radiation source position by a weighting factor which corresponds to the square of the distance between the scatter center, at which the ray associated with the measuring value was scattered, and the point of incidence of the scattered ray on the measuring surface.
When the rebinning is omitted in other versions, an additional multiplication of the filtered measuring values by a weighting factor is necessary; this factor is equal to the reciprocal value of the square of the distance between the radiation source position and the scatter center at which the detected ray was scattered.
During the back projection in the step 115 all curved rays are then taken into account which pass through the voxel V(x,y,q). If not one ray from a radiation source position passes exactly through the center of the voxel, the associated value must be determined by interpolation of the measuring values of neighboring rays. The measuring value that can be associated with the ray passing through the voxel, or the measuring value obtained by interpolation, is accumulated on the voxel V(x,y,q). After the contributions to the relevant voxel have thus been accumulated for all radiation source positions, it is checked in the step 117 whether all voxels in the (x,y,q) zone to be reconstructed have been dealt with. If this is not the case, the flow chart branches to the step 111. Otherwise the scatter intensity distribution has been determined for all voxels in the FOV and the reconstruction method is terminated (step 119).
In other versions the back projection in the volume defined by two linearly independent vectors of the rotational plane and the wave vector transfer can be carried out as an approximation along straight rays.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 52 662 | Nov 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/04749 | 10/24/2003 | WO | 00 | 5/5/2005 |
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WO2004/044848 | 5/27/2004 | WO | A |
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