Multisource inverse-geometry CT. Part I. System concept and development

作者:De Man Bruno*; Uribe Jorge; Baek Jongduk; Harrison Dan; Yin Zhye; Longtin Randy; Roy Jaydeep; Waters Bill; Wilson Colin; Short Jonathan; Inzinna Lou; Reynolds Joseph; Neculaes V Bogdan; Frutschy Kristopher; Senzig Bob; Pelc Norbert
来源:Medical Physics, 2016, 43(8): 4607-4616.
DOI:10.1118/1.4954846

摘要

Purpose: This paper presents an overview of multisource inverse-geometry computed tomography (IGCT) as well as the development of a gantry-based research prototype system. The development of the distributed x-ray source is covered in a companion paper [V.B.Neculaes et al., "Multisource inverse-geometry CT. Part II. X-ray source design and prototype,"Med. Phys. 43, 4617-4627 (2016)]. While progress updates of this development have been presented at conferences and in journal papers, this paper is the first comprehensive overview of the multisource inverse-geometry CT concept and prototype. The authors also provide a review of all previous IGCT related publications. Methods: The authors designed and implemented a gantry-based 32-source IGCT scanner with 22 cm field-of-view, 16 cm z-coverage, 1 s rotation time, 1.09x1.024 mm detector cell size, as low as 0.4x0.8 mm focal spot size and 80-140 kVp x-ray source voltage. The system is built using commercially available CT components and a custom made distributed x-ray source. The authors developed dedicated controls, calibrations, and reconstruction algorithms and evaluated the system performance using phantoms and small animals. Results: The authors performed IGCT system experiments and demonstrated tube current up to 125 mA with up to 32 focal spots. The authors measured a spatial resolution of 13 lp / cm at 5% cutoff. The scatter-to-primary ratio is estimated 62% for a 32 cm water phantom at 140 kVp. The authors scanned several phantoms and small animals. The initial images have relatively high noise due to the low x-ray flux levels but minimal artifacts. Conclusions: IGCT has unique benefits in terms of dose-efficiency and cone-beam artifacts, but comes with challenges in terms of scattered radiation and x-ray flux limits. To the authors' knowledge, their prototype is the first gantry-based IGCT scanner. The authors summarized the design and implementation of the scanner and the authors presented results with phantoms and small animals.

  • 出版日期2016-8