Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1887890 | Physica Medica | 2007 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
In modern X-ray computed tomography (CT) a trend to increased volume coverage by using multi-row detectors is apparent. Flat-panel detector CT (FPD-CT) systems provide an even larger field of measurement which, however, results in an increased scatter fraction. We investigated the scatter intensities registered in the case of FPD-CT. A hybrid model for the simulation of scatter combining deterministic and Monte Carlo methods was used for the scatter calculations. The influence of imaging parameters on the registered scatter intensity was examined both in single projections and reconstructed images. Scatter-to-primary ratios (SPRs) are given for various values of object thickness, field size, object-to-detector distance, incident energy and projection angle. For the simulations, homogeneous water phantoms and realistic patient data sets were used to produce scatter data representative for clinical situations. The SPR increases with object size, collimation and z-extent resulting in SPRÂ â«Â 1 and respective scatter artifacts in the reconstructed images. In contrary, the scatter intensity decreases non-linearly with the object-to-detector distance. The angular and spatial distributions of scatter form a flat function as compared to the distribution of the primary signal. Single scatter appears to determine the distribution and magnitude of the total-scatter intensity at the detector.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Radiation
Authors
Yiannis Kyriakou, Willi A. Kalender,