What are the 3 methods of data acquisition?
What is a localiser scan?
Digital imaging used as a anatomical guide/map to plan the actual scans.
NOT cross sectional and can be either AP or lateral
How are localiser scans done?
Patient moves and tube does not, then the DFOV is chosen
What is DFOV?
Display Field Of View = box that hold relevant and necessary anatomy that will be what is included on the rest of scans
What is the X axis of table movements?
Left and right
If error: patient is not laying in the centre of the table
What is the Y axis of table movements?
Up and down or table height
If error: table/patient not centred midcoronal by tech
What is the z axis of table movements?
Depth of table into gantry
If error: centring incorrect (either too superior or distal)
What is step and shoot scanning?
Table moves to the desired location and takes a single axial slice (may not be done if not necessary)
MUST SUSPEND RESPIRATION!!
What are advantages of step and shoot scanning?
What are disadvantages of step and shoot scanning?
What is gapped imaging?
Skipping irrelevant areas or to especially focus on one region
Reduced patient dose
What is the largest allowable slice thickness?
10 mm aka must be smaller than detector width
What MDCT?
Multi Detector Computed Tomography
Parallel row scanners with a cone shaped beam source
What are advantages of MDCT?
What is dual source CT?
2 tubes and 2 corresponding detector array
First set: detector array covers entire scan FOV
Second set: detector limited to a more central and smaller FOV
What are advantages of dual source CT?
What is dual energy/spectral imaging CT?
Acquisition of data of 2 different kVp settings
What 3 things are required for helical scans?
What are advantages of helical scanning?
What developments are needed in axial scans for helical scans?
What is helical interpolation?
Removes the tilt and blur from helical scans with statistical methodology to better resemble axial images
What is SDCT interpolation?
360LT or 180LT
What is MDCT interpolation and what are it’s effects on imaging?
180LT - corrects better to produce thinner slices, but creates more noise
360LT - worse for accuracy in slice thickness, better resolution
What should pitch be in between?
1 - 1.5