|
|
|
| United States Patent | 4176279 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4176279.html |
| Inventor(s) | Schwierz; Gunter (Erlangen, DE);
Haerer; Wolfgang (Erlangen, DE) |
| Abstract | In an illustrated embodiment, the fan shaped beam of penetrating radiation
has a central ray directed offcenter relative to a row of detectors e.g.
by a distance corresponding to one-fourth the detector separation. In this
way, for each projection with a given central ray angle, further points
can be derived by interpolation using the measurements from other
projections. With a given number of detector elements, the number of
points per projection can be doubled in this way. |
|
|
|
Title Information  |
|
|
|
|
|
Drawing from US Patent 4176279 |
|
|
Tomograph for producing transverse layer images |
|
|
|
|
|
| Publication Date |
November 27, 1979 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Filing Date |
April 14, 1978 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Priority Data |
May 24, 1977[DE]2723401 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Title Information  |
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
We claim as our invention:
1. In a tomographic apparatus for producing transverse layer image of a
radiography subject including a patient couch, a radiation measuring
arrangement having a radiation source which produces a fan-shaped beam of
rays penetrating the radiography subject, whose cross sectional extent
perpendicular to the layer plane is equal to the layer thickness and in
the layer plane is of such a magnitude that the entire radiography subject
is penetrated, and having a radiation receiver consisting of a row of
detector elements each of which is at least partially with is said fan
shaped beam and which detects the radiation intensity behind the subject,
a rotary drive device for the measuring arrangement and a measured value
converter for the transformation of the signals supplied by the radiation
receiver into a layer image, characterized in that the radiation receiver
(2) is arranged so that its axis of symmetry (23a) and the axis of
symmetry (24a) of the x-ray beam (4) are always at a distance from each
other in the layer plane.
2. A tomographic apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the
distance is selected so that it corresponds to a quarter of the detector
element distance.
3. A measuring system for a tomographic apparatus for producing a
transverse layer image of a layer region, said apparatus including a
patient couch, a radiation measuring arrangement having a radiation source
for producing a substantially symmetrical fan-shaped beam of rays
penetrating the layer region, and having a radiation receiver comprising a
row of detector elements each of which is at least partially within said
fan shaped beam and forming a substantially symmetrical array for
detecting the radiation intensity from the source which is transmitted
through the layer region, and means for producing successive projections
by shifting the radiation source angularly about the layer region to
impinge the fan-shaped beam on the layer region from successive different
directions, and a measured value converter connected with the radiation
receiver for the transformation of the signals supplied by the detector
elements for each projection to produce a layer image, characterized in
said measuring system providing an angular offset between an axis of
symmetry (23a) of the radiation receiver (2) and an axis of symmetry (24a)
of the fan-shaped x-ray beam (4) for each of said projections.
4. A measuring system according to claim 3 with a rotary frame mounting the
x-ray source (1) and the radiation receiver (2) for joint rotation while
maintaining the center of the row of detector elements offset from the
point of intersection of the central ray of the fan shaped beam with the
row of detector elements by a distance corresponding to one fourth of the
center to center separation between detector elements. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a tomographic apparatus for producing transverse
layer images of a radiography subject, with a patient couch, with a
radiation measuring arrangement comprising a radiation source producing a
fan-shaped beam of rays which penetrates the radiography subject and whose
cross sectional extent perpendicular to the layer plane is equal to the
layer thickness and the beam transverse extent being of such a magnitude
in the layer plane that the whole radiography subject is penetrated, and a
radiation receiver consisting of a row of detector elements, which detects
the radiation intensity behind the subject, with a rotating device for the
measuring arrangement and with a computer for the transformation of the
signals supplied by the radiation receiver into a tomographic layer image.
A tomographic apparatus of this kind is described for example in the German
Offenlengungsschrift 25 53 187. In this type of tomographic apparatus the
scanning of a patient is carried out by rotating the measuring arrangement
through an angle of, for example, 360.degree.. During this rotation the
radiation receiver can be periodically interrogated at equal intervals of
time. The number of measured values per scanning process is therefore
given by the number of the interrogation processes of the radiation
receiver; i.e., by the number of the projections and the number of
detector elements in the radiation receiver.
In order to achieve a good image quality it is necessary, on the one hand,
to select a sufficiently high number of projections, but on the other hand
also to provide a sufficiently high number of detector elements in the
radiation receiver. It is not possible however for the number of detector
elements in the radiation receiver to be increased indefinitely.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The underlying object of the invention is to produce a tomographic
apparatus of the initially cited type with which, with a relatively low
number of detector elements in the radiation receiver, a relatively large
amount of data is available for the image calculation per projection.
This object is achieved according to the invention in that the radiation
receiver is arranged so that its axis of symmetry and the axis of symmetry
of the x-ray beam are offset at a distance from each other in the layer
plane. In the tomographic apparatus according to the invention, it is
possible to calculate for a specific projection, by means of
interpolation, data for the image calculation which originate from other
projections. In this way, without increasing the number of detector
elements, a substantial improvement of the image is achieved in comparison
to the case where the axis of symmetry of the radiation receiver coincides
with the axis of symmetry of the x-ray beam. A particularly advantageous
development consists in selecting the distance of offset so that it
corresponds to a quarter of the detector element separation.
The invention is hereafter described in more detail with reference to an
exemplary embodiment represented in the accompanying sheets of drawings;
and other objects, features and advantages will be apparent from this
detailed disclosure and from the appended claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 comprises a diagrammatic cross-sectional view labeled FIG. 1A and a
longitudinal partial schematic view labeled FIG. 1B, showing tomographic
apparatus for producing transverse layer images;
FIG. 2 shows a schematic representation of the radiation measuring
arrangement in the case of the tomographic apparatus according to FIG. 1;
FIGS. 3 and 4 show representations for illustrating how the data is
obtained;
FIG. 5 (on sheet one of the drawings) shows the radiation measuring
arragement of a tomographic apparatus according to the invention; and
FIGS. 6 and 7 show representations for illustrating data acquisition in the
case of a tomographic apparatus according to FIG. 5.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The tomographic apparatus shown in FIG. 1 has a radiation measuring
arrangement which consists of an x-ray tube 1 and a radiation receiver 2.
By means of a schematically represented rotational drive device 3, the
radiation measuring arrangement 1, 2 can be rotated about a longitudinal
axis 4a. The x-ray tube 1 emits a fan-shaped x-ray beam 4 which totally
penetrates in a transverse layer a patient 6 lying on a couch 5. It can be
seen from the side view in FIG. 1B that the cross-section of the x-ray
beam 4 perpendicular to the penetrated layer is equal to the layer
thickness. The x-ray tube 1 is supplied by an x-ray generator 7 with high
voltage. The output signals of the radiation receiver 2 are processed by a
measured value converter 8 which calculates therefrom an image in the form
of a matrix of image point data. This image is reproduced on a display
unit 9. The radiation receiver 2 consists of a row of detector elements.
The number of detector elements is selected in accordance with the desired
image definition and is over 100 on the order of magnitude.
In order to produce a transverse layer image, the measuring arrangement 1,
2 is rotated by means of the rotary drive device 3 through 360.degree.
around the patient 6. At predetermined positions, e.g. at each degree of
angle, the output signals of the detector elements of the radiation
receiver 2 are thereby transmitted to the computer of measured value
converter 8.
In order to illustrate the fundamental mode of operation, FIG. 2 represents
the focus 10 of the x-ray tube 1 and the fan-shaped x-ray beam 4. In order
to illustrate the principle, it is sufficient if, according to FIG. 2,
only four detector elements 11, 12, 13, 14 are shown by way of example in
the radiation receiver 2. A collimator element 15 to 18 lies before each
detector element 11 to 14.
FIG. 3 again shows the focus 10 of the x-ray tube 1 and the central
radiation path or axis 24 associated with four detector elements having a
central axis 23. Thus four measured value points 19 to 22 are represented
corresponding to the four detector elements taken as a basis. If it is
conceived that a perpendicular line is drawn from the coordinate origin Z
representing the center of rotation of the central ray of the x-ray beam
and that the measured value is plotted at the foot of the perpendicular,
then the four measured values lie on a circle T which is drawn through
origin Z and the position of the focus 10 which is under consideration.
FIG. 4 shows the representation according to FIG. 3 for three different
positions of the focus 10; namely, the positions 10a to 10c, thus three
different projections. In accordance with this, three different positions
are obtained for the measured value points, designated by 19a to 22a, 19b
to 22b and 19c to 22c lying on the respective circles Ta, Tb, and Tc. It
can be seen from FIG. 4 that all the measured value points lie on two
measured value circles K1 and K2 and are distributed unequally over the
plane shown (the socalled Radon plane) which corresponds to the layer
plane of the irradiated object. This unequal distribution is one of the
reasons for artifacts in the image calculated by the computer of converter
8 in the case of the known x-ray tomographic apparatus.
According to FIG. 2 in the known x-ray tomographic apparatus the axis of
symmetry (designated 23) of the radiation receiver 2 coincides with the
axis of symmetry (designated 24) of the x-ray beam 4. Because of this fact
there results the distribution represented in FIG. 4, of the measured
value points 19a to 22c on two measured value circles K1 and K2.
FIG. 5 (on sheet one of the drawings) now shows a measuring arrangement in
the case of which the radiation receiver 2 is disposed so that its axis of
symmetry 23a and the axis of symmetry 24a of the x-ray beam 4 are offset
at a distance from each other in the layer plane (and as measured at the
detector) which corresponds to a quarter of the center to center detector
element distance a. FIG. 6 again represents the distribution of the
measured value points in the Radon plane. The measured value points 25a to
28a are obtained for the focus position 10a, the measured value points 25b
to 28b for the focus position 10b and the measured value points 25c to 28c
for the focus position 10c. It can be seen from FIG. 6 that in the case of
the shown mutual displacement of the two axes of symmetry 23a and 24a, all
the measured value points are on four measured value circles 29 to 32.
FIG. 7 now shows that by increasing the projections a calculation of
intermediate data is possible. In addition to the already mentioned
projections 10a to 10c with the measured value points 25a to 28c there are
also three projections 10d to 10f and corresponding measured value points
25d to 28f which also lie on the measured value circles 29 to 32.
FIG. 7 shows that for the projection 10e, for example, the data of a data
point 33 can be calculated; namely, from measured value data which is
derived not from this projection but from other projections; and
specifically by carrying out interpolation from the measured values of the
measured value points 25a and 25d. Measured value data is therefore
utilized from the projections 10a and 10d in order to calculate, by
interpolation, the data of the data point 33 for the projection 10e. In
the same way, the data of a data point lying between the data 26e and 27e
can be calculated by interpolation for the projection 10e; namely, from
the data of the measured value points 26a and 26d. This data point is
designated by 34. Furthermore, it is possible to asscertain the data of a
data point 35 for the projection 10e from the data of the measured value
points 27a and 27f. Finally, it is also possible, for the projection 10e,
to calculate from the data of the measured value points 28a and 28f the
data of a data point 36. If the data of the projection 10e is examined, it
can be seen that, through the corresponding focus, eight data points are
coordinated thereto on the circle, of which four are derived from true
measured values and four have been obtained by interpolation from measured
values which are derived from other projections. In a similar way an
intermediate value calculation by interpolation is also possible for other
projections. By doubling the number of projections during a rotation of
the measuring arrangement 1, 2, a doubling of the number of data points
per projection is achieved when a displacement of the axes of symmetry 23a
and 24a according to FIG. 5 is effected. This doubling of the number of
data points corresponds to a doubling of the number of detector elements
in the radiation receiver 2. Thus the possibility for a substantially more
exact image calculation is created.
In order to illustrate the conception behind the invention, four detectors
only are employed in the radiation receiver 2 in connection with the FIGS.
2 and 5. In practice, however, even in the case of the teaching of the
invention; i.e. in the case of a mutual displacement of the axes of
symmetry 23a and 24a according to FIG. 5, the number of detector elements
in the radiation receiver 2 is over 100 on the order to magnitude. The
detector elements may be semiconductor detectors, for example.
In FIG. 5, the measuring system may comprise a rotary frame indicated at 37
having a center of rotation or axis 38. The rotary frame mounts source 10
and the associated source collimator so that the central ray of the fan
shaped beam 4 coincides with the axis of symmetry 24a of the beam. The
rotary frame mounts the detector array 2 as diagrammatically illustrated
in FIG. 5 so that the central ray at 24a intersects the central detector
element 12 at a distance equal to one-fourth the detector separation a
from the center of the detector array represented by its intersection with
the axis of symmetry 23a.
It will be apparent that many modifications and variations may be effected
without departing from the scope of the novel concepts and teachings of
the present invention.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|