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Fundamentals of Digital Radiology

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Presentation on theme: "Fundamentals of Digital Radiology"— Presentation transcript:

1 Fundamentals of Digital Radiology
George David Medical College of Georgia

2 Filmless Department What we mean by Digital Digital Radiographs PACS
Picture Archival & Communication Systems Reading from Monitors

3 What is a digital image? 2D array of #’s representing some image attribute such as optical density x-ray attenuation Radiography Fluoroscopy CTDI echo intensity Magnetization T1 T2 Proton Density 125 25 311 111 182 222 176 199 192 85 69 133 149 112 77 103 118 139 154 120 145 301 256 223 287 225 178 322 325 299 353 333 300

4 Number Array Forms Digital Image
194 73 22

5 Digital Image Formation
The finer the mesh, the better the digital rendering

6 What is this? 12 X 9 Matrix

7 Same object, smaller squares
24 X 18 Matrix

8 Same object, smaller squares
48 X 36 Matrix

9 Same object, smaller squares
96 X 72 Matrix

10 Same object, smaller squares
192 X 144 Matrix

11 Display of Digital Image
Each number of a digital image (pixel value) assigned a gray shade Assignments can be changed Window/level Pixel values cannot

12 Computer Storage Computer image file is array of numbers
Same as any computer file 125, 25, 311, 111, 182, 222, 176, 199, 192, 85, 69, 133, 149, 112, 77, 103, 118, 139, 154, 125, 120, 145, 301, 256, 223, 287, 256, 225, 178, 322, 325, 299, 353, 333, 300 125 25 311 111 182 222 176 199 192 85 69 133 149 112 77 103 118 139 154 120 145 301 256 223 287 225 178 322 325 299 353 333 300

13 Digital Copies 125, 25, 311, 111, 182, 222, 176, 199, 192, 85, 69, 133, 149, 112, 77, 103, 118, 139, 154, 125, 120, 145, 301, 256, 223, 287, 256, 225, 178, 322, 325, 299, 353, 333, 300 125, 25, 311, 111, 182, 222, 176, 199, 192, 85, 69, 133, 149, 112, 77, 103, 118, 139, 154, 125, 120, 145, 301, 256, 223, 287, 256, 225, 178, 322, 325, 299, 353, 333, 300 = If you’ve got the same numbers you have an IDENTICAL copy Analog copies are never identical

14 All Digital Copies are Originals
=

15 Image Matrix & Image Size
Doubling the matrix dimension quadruples the # pixels 111 87 118 155 125 25 311 111 199 192 85 69 77 103 118 139 145 301 256 223 4 X 4 Matrix 16 pixels 2 X 2 Matrix 4 pixels

16 Doubling the matrix dimension quadruples # pixels
Image Matrix Doubling the matrix dimension quadruples # pixels Matrix # Pixels 512 X => ,144 1024 X1024 => 1,048,576 2048 X2048 => 4,194,304 A matrix compared to a 5122 matrix quadruples disk storage requirements image transmission time digital image manipulation

17 Matrix Size & Resolution
More pixels = better spatial resolution

18 Pixel Values & The Bit Bit=>Fundamental unit of computer storage
Only 2 allowable values 1 Computers do all operations with 0’s & 1’s BUT Computers group bits together

19 Abbreviations Review Bit (binary digit) Byte Kilobyte Megabyte
Smallest binary unit; has value 0 or 1 only Byte 8 bits Kilobyte 210 or 1024 bytes sometimes rounded to 1000 bytes Megabyte 213 or 1,048,576 bytes or 1024 kilobytes sometimes rounded to 1,000,000 bytes or 1,000 kilobytes

20 # of unique values which can be represented by 1 bit
2

21 # of unique values which can be represented by 2 bits
1 2 4 unique combinations / values 3 4

22 # of unique values which can be represented by 3 bits
5 1 6 2 7 3 8 4 8 unique combinations / values

23 Digital Image Bit Depth
the number of computer bits (1’s or 0’s) available to store each pixel value Values Bits # Values 1 2 3 . 8 0, 1 00, 01, 10, 11 000, 001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 110, 111 . , , 2 1 = 2 2 2 = 4 2 3 = 8 . 2 8 = 256

24 Bit Depth and Pixel Presentation on Image
Indicates # of possible brightness levels for a pixel presentation of brightness levels pixel values assigned brightness levels brightness levels can be manipulated without affecting image data window level

25 Bit Depth & Contrast Resolution
The more bits per pixel the more possible gray shades and the better contrast resolution. 2 bit; 4 grade shades 8 bits; 256 grade shades

26 Computer Storage / Image Size
Storage = # Pixels X # Bytes/Pixel Example: 512 X 512 pixels; 1 Byte / Pixel 512 X 512 pixel array # pixels = 512 X 512 = 262,144 pixels 262,144 pixels X 1 byte / pixel = 262,144 bytes 256 Kbytes 0.25 MBytes

27 Image Size Depends on both matrix size & bit depth
Larger (finer) matrix requires more storage doubling matrix size quadruples image size Larger bit depth requires more storage doubling bit depth (theoretically) doubles image size

28 Image Compression jpg gif (20) 37’s
reduction of digital image storage size by application of algorithm for example, repetitive data could be represented by data value and # repetitions rather than by repeating value jpg 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37, 37 gif (20) 37’s

29 Image Compression Image Decompression Compression Ratio
calculating original digital image from previously compressed data Compression Ratio original image size compressed image size ratio depends upon data to be compressed algorithm

30 Compression Types Reversible Compression Non-reversable Compression
Image decompresses to original pixel values Low compression ratios only Non-reversable Compression Decompressed image’s pixel values not necessarily identical to original much higher compression ratios possible variation from original image may or may not be visible or clinically significant

31 Non-Reversable Compression
variation from original image generally increases with increasing compression ratio but a higher compression ratio means less storage requirements variation less noticeable for dynamic (moving) images than for still images such as radiographs

32 Computed Radiography (CR)
Re-usable metal imaging plates replace film & cassette Uses conventional bucky & x-ray equipment                                                                  

33 CR Exposure & Readout

34 CR Readout

35 Another View: CR Operation

36 Computer Radiography (CR)
photostimulable phosphor plate radiation causes electrons to move to higher energy states Excitation Plate’s structure traps electrons in higher energy states Form latent image H i g h e r E n e r g y - E l e c t r o n S t a t e P h o t o n p u m p s e l e c t r o n t o X - R a y h i g h e r e n e r g y s t a t e P h o t o n - - - L o w e r E n e r g y - - - - - - E l e c t r o n - - - - - - - - - S t a t e - - - - - - - - -

37 Reading Imaging Plate laser scans plate with
laser releases electrons trapped in high energy states electrons fall to low energy states giving up energy as visible light light intensity is measure of incident radiation Lower Energy Electron State

38 Reading Imaging Plate Reader scans plate with laser
Beam moved using rotating mirror Plate pulled through scanner by rollers Light emitted by plate measured by PM tube & recorded by computer

39 Laser & Emitted Light are Different Colors
Phosphor stimulated by laser light Intensity of emitted light indicates amount of radiation incident on phosphor at each location Only light emitted by phosphor measured by PMT Filters remove laser light

40 CR Erasure after read-out, plate erased using a bright light
plate can be erased and re-used Erasure re-use cycle can be repeated without limit Plate life defined not by erasure cycles but by physical wear

41 CR Resolution Some vendor CR spatial resolution depends upon plate size. Smaller pixels More pixels / mm

42 CR Throughput Generally slower than film processing
CR reader must finish reading one plate before starting the next Film processors can run films back to back

43 CR Latitude Much greater latitude than screen/film
Plate responds to many decades of input exposure under / overexposures unlikely Computer scale inputs exposure to viewable densities Unlike film, receptor separate from viewer

44 Film Screen vs. CR Latitude
CR Latitude: .01 – 100 mR Unlike film, small changes in incident radiation result in CR signal 100

45 Digital Radiography (DR)
Digital electronic bucky

46 DR Formats Electronic bucky incorporated into x-ray equipment
Electronic wireless cassettes

47 Digital Radiography (DR)
Receptor provides direct digital output No processor / reader required Images available virtually immediately Far fewer steps for radiographer

48 TFT = THIN-FILM TRANSISTOR ARRAY
Types of DR Receptors TFT = THIN-FILM TRANSISTOR ARRAY

49 Digital Radiography (DR)
High latitude as for CR DR portables now in available Radiographer immediately sees image

50 Digital Raw Image Unprocessed image as read from receptor
CR Intensity data from PMT’s as a result of scanning plate with laser DR Raw Data read directly from TFT array Not a readable diagnostic image Requires computer post-processing Specific software algorithms must be applied to image prior to presenting it as finished radiograph

51 Enhancing Raw Image (Image Segmentation)
* Identify collimated image border Separate raw radiation from anatomy Apply appropriate tone-scale to image Done with look-up table (LUT) This process is specific to a particular body part and projection

52 Image Segmentation Computer then defines anatomic region
Computer establishes location of collimated border of image based on exam type and view provided by operator Computer then defines anatomic region Finished image produced by tone scaling Requires histogram analysis of anatomic region

53 Histogram Graph showing how much of image is exposed at various levels
# pixels

54 Tone Scaling Post-Processing
Body part & projection-specific algorithms determine average exposure Must correctly identify anatomical region Look Up Table (LUT) computed to display image with proper Density Contrast

55 Film/Screen Limited Latitude
Film dictates proper radiation exposure No post processing Improperly exposed films lose contrast

56 Should I Worry? In CR & DR, image density is no longer a reliable indicator of exposure factor control.

57

58 CR / DR Latitude DANGER Will Robinson!!!
Almost impossible to under or overexpose CR / DR Underexposures look noisy Overexposures look GOOD!!!

59 How to Determine Optimum Radiation Dose?

60 Carestream Exposure Index
Each manufacturer provides feedback to technologist on exposure to digital receptor Displayed on CR reader monitor Displayed on workstations Fuji S-Number Carestream Exposure Index Deviation Index

61 Exposure Index Indexes differ by manufacturer Form
Linear Logrithmic Some indexes go up with radiation, some go down

62 Calculated Exposure Index Affected by
X-Ray technique selection Improper centering Improper selection of study or projection Placing two or more views on same CR cassette

63 Phototimed CR Phantom Image
75 kVp 88 mAs 2460 EI

64 Let’s Approximately Double mAs
75 kVp 88 mAs 2460 EI 75 kVp 160 mAs 2680 EI

65 Let’s Go Crazy 75 kVp 88 mAs 2460 EI 75 kVp 640 mAs 3300 EI

66 How Low Can You Go? Cut mAs in Half!
75 kVp 88 mAs 2460 EI 75 kVp 40 mAs 2060 EI

67 Let’s Go Crazy Low 75 kVp 8 mAs 1380 EI 75 kVp 1 mAs 550 EI

68 CR Artifacts Physical damage to imaging plates Dirt in reader
Cracks, scuffs, scratches Contamination Dust / dirt Dirt in reader Highly sensitive to scatter radiation

69 DR Artifacts Dead detector elements
Spatial variations in background signal & gain Grid interference Software can help correct for above

70 Shifting Gears: Fluoroscopy Issues

71 Digital Video Sources DR type image receptor
Conventional Image Intensifier with Video Signal Digitized (“Frame Grabber”) I m a g e T u b X-Ray Input Image Tube TV Amplfier Analog to Digital Converter Memory (Computer) Lens System

72 Digital Spot Film Frame grabber digitizes image
Digital image saved by computer Radiographic Technique used required to control quantum noise

73 Last Image Hold Computer displays last fluoro image before radiation shut off. Image noisier than for digital spot Image made at fluoroscopic technique / intensity Allows operator to review static processes without keeping beam on ideal for teaching environments ideal for orthopedic applications such as hip pinning Less radiation than digital spot

74 Fluoro Frame Averaging
Conventional fluoro only displays current frame Frame averaging allows computer to average current with user-selectable number of previous frames Averages current frame & history

75 Fluoro Frame Averaging Tradeoff
Advantage: Reduces quantum noise Disadvantage Because history frames are averaged with current frame, any motion can result in lag

76 Other Fluoro Features Real-time Edge Enhancement / Image Filtering
Option of using lower frame rates (15, 7.5, 3.75 fps rather than 30) computer displays last frame until next one reduces flicker Lowers patient and scatter exposure Exposure proportional to frame rate dynamic studies may be jumpy

77 Digital Subtraction Immediate replay of run Free selection of mask
before or after bolus >1 frame may be averaged for mask Note subtraction adds noise

78 Digital Image Manipulations
on-screen measurements distances angles volumes/areas stenosis image annotation peak opacification / roadmapping peak opacification displays vessels after a test injection allows visualization of live catheter on top to saved image of test injection

79 Digital Applications Multi-modality imaging / Image fusion PET/CT

80 DR & Energy Subtraction
2 images taken milliseconds apart at 2 kVp’s Combine / subtract images Soft Tissue Image Bone Image

81 Other Possibilities Tomosynthesis Histogram Equalization
Multi-slice linear tomography from one exposure series Histogram Equalization Use computer to provide approximately equal density to various areas of image.

82 The End ?


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