System and Method for Performing Spiral-Trajectory Tomosynthesis
20210393217 · 2021-12-23
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B6/027
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B6/4458
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61B6/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A tomosynthesis scanning system includes an X-ray emitter connected to a first robotic device, and an X-ray detector connected to a second robotic device. The first robotic device moves the emitter along a first spiral trajectory path and, optionally, the second robotic device moves the detector along a second spiral trajectory path during the scanning process. Where both the emitter and detector move, the movement is synchronized. A computer is used to control the first and second robotic devices. In operation, an object to be scanned is positioned between the X-ray emitter and the X-ray detector, then the X-ray emitter is moved alone, a first spiral path while emitting a photon beam at the X-ray detector and allowing the photon beam to pass through, the object before reaching the X-ray detector, Attenuation of the photon beam reaching the X-ray detector is measured and an image is produced based on the measured attenuation of the photon beam.
Claims
1. A tomosynthesis scanning system comprising: an X-ray emitter connected to a first robotic device; an X-ray detector connected to a second robotic device; wherein the first robotic device moves the emitter along a first spiral trajectory path and the second robotic device moves the detector along a second spiral trajectory path during the scanning process.
2. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 1, wherein the movement of the emitter and the detector are synchronized.
3. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 1, further comprising a computer for controlling the first and second robotic devices.
4. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 1, wherein the first spiral trajectory path is at least 360 degrees.
5. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 4, wherein the second spiral trajectory path is at least 360 degrees.
6. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 4, wherein the first spiral trajectory path is at least 720 degrees.
7. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 6, wherein the second spiral trajectory path is at least 720 degrees.
8. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 1, wherein the first robotic device moves the X-ray emitter to maintain a direct photon beam at the X-ray detector during scanning
9. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 1, wherein the second spiral trajectory path has a length shorter than a length of the first spiral trajectory path.
10. A tomosynthesis scanning system comprising: an X-ray emitter connected to a robotic device; an X-ray detector fixed to a surface; wherein the robotic device moves the emitter along a spiral trajectory path during the scanning process.
11. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 10, further comprising a computer for controlling the robotic device.
12. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 10, wherein the spiral trajectory path is at least 360 degrees.
13. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 12, wherein the spiral trajectory path is at least 720 degrees.
14. The tomosynthesis scanning system of claim 10, wherein the robotic device moves the X-ray emitter to maintain a direct photon beam at the X-ray detector during scanning.
15. A tomosynthesis scanning method comprising: placing an object to be scanned between an X-ray emitter and an X-ray detector; moving the X-ray emitter along a first spiral path while emitting a photon beam at the X-ray detector; allowing, the photon beam to pass through the object before reaching the X-ray detector; measuring attenuation of the photon beam reaching the X-ray detector; and producing an image based on the measured attenuation of the photon beam.
16. The tomosynthesis scanning method of claim 15, further comprising moving the X-ray detector during the scanning process.
17. The tomosynthesis scanning method of claim 16, wherein the X-ray detector moves along a second spiral path.
18. The tomosynthesis scanning method of claim 17, wherein the second spiral path is synchronized with the first spiral path.
19. The tomosynthesis scanning method of claim 15, wherein the first spiral path is at least 360 degrees.
20. The tomosynthesis scanning method of claim 19, wherein the first spiral path is at least 720 degrees.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS AND APPENDICES
[0025] For the purpose of facilitating an understanding of the subject matter sought to be protected, there are illustrated in the accompanying drawings and appendices, embodiments thereof, from an inspection of which, when considered in connection with the following description, the subject matter sought to be protected, its construction and operation, and many of its advantages should be readily understood and appreciated.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0042] While this invention is susceptible of embodiments in many different forms, there is shown in the drawings and will herein be described in detail at least one preferred embodiment of the invention with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the broad aspect of the invention to any of the specific embodiments illustrated.
[0043] Generally speaking, as shown in
[0044] Referring to
[0045] An X-Ray detector is an electronic device capable of converting a cumulative energy of photons hitting a detector element (also called a pixel) within a given time (also called the accumulation time) into a digital value. Pixels are arranged as two-dimensional (2D) regular rectangular structures. An X-Ray Source (or emitter) is the source of an X-Ray photon beam 30.
[0046] As shown in
[0047] Conversely,
[0048] X-Ray attenuation is a measure of the reduction in the X-Ray photon beam intensity. That is, when the X-Ray photon beam 30 penetrates a material, the number of photons coming out from material without changing direction or being absorbed is smaller than the number of photons before penetration. Inside the material, X-Ray photons get scattered and absorbed due to various physical effects. The ratio between the number of photons (i.e., intensity) before and after penetration of the object is called attenuation. The attenuation value depends on photon energy and material. For example, one centimeter of water has an attenuation value of approximately 1.2 when the photon energy is ˜80 kVp. This means that the “after-object” photon amount is a factor of 1.2 smaller than the “before-object” photon amount. Attenuation as a physical factor has special scales (i.e., is mapped to special scales) called CT numbers or Hounsfield units (HU).
[0049] A three-dimensional X-Ray attenuation map is a 3-D image. Every element (typically called a “voxel”) of such an image has a value equal to the X-Ray attenuation factor of the material located at a particular point in space (voxel).
[0050] The scanning process involves the emission and detection of photons before and after penetration of a material or object. During a spiral-trajectory scanning process, the X-Ray source 12 and detector 14 move under the following conditions: X-Ray source 12 is always positioned in such a way that when the emitted photons penetrate a sample (called a scanned object) they are then hitting the detector 14. The scanned object gets completely or partially exposed during every detector accumulation cycle. After every accumulating cycle, the computer 16 reads a digital signal from the detector 14 and writes it to the computer storage (e.g., hard drive) 18 as a file, also called an input projection or input view. Typically (in most commercial tomosynthesis systems) the detector 14 remains fixed, and the X-Ray emitter 12 moves along either a straight line (see, for example, citation no. [1]), an arc (see, for example, citation no. [2]) or a circle (see, for example, citations nos. [3,6]).
[0051] A tomosynthesis image is a set of radiograph-type images which are also called layers. Every layer contains a sharp (i.e., in-focus) image or cross-section of the object within a limited range of depth. The sharp (in-focus) layer is superimposed with blurry (i.e., not in focus) images corresponding to other object depth ranges. So, every tomosynthesis layer image contains sharp (in-focus) details located at a specific depth and blurry (out-of-focus) details located at other depths of the scanned object. Such superimposition of blurry details is called “layer leaking”.
[0052] Tomosynthesis reconstruction is a conversion from a set of two-dimensional views (projections) into a set of two-dimensional images (also called layers). The theory and practical implementation of this conversion (reconstruction) is known to those skilled in the art and within the public domain (see, for example, citation no. [4]).
[0053] A preferred embodiment of the presently disclosed system 10 includes an X-Ray detector 14, an X-Ray Source (emitter) 12 and mechanical unit(s) 26 used to move the emitter 12 and (optionally) the detector 14 relative to each other. As previously noted, the system 10 is controlled by a computer 16, which transfers data from the detector 14 to storage 18 and then uses the data, via a specific processing algorithm, for reconstruction (i.c., spiral tomosynthesis reconstruction, see below). The mechanical unit(s) 26 can be specially designed or can be modified “off-the-shelf” industrial robots.
[0054] Using a preferred embodiment of the system 10, during a scanning process: [0055] the emitter 12 moves along a flat spiral trajectory of 360+ degrees (typically 720 degrees or 2 full revolutions); [0056] the emitter 12 is always positioned in such a way that when the emitted photons penetrate a sample (called a scanned object) they then hit the detector 14; [0057] the detector 14 is either stationary or it moves synchronically with the emitter 12 where the detector center trajectory is also spiral; [0058] the detector 14 always (at any moment) is positioned in such a way that a symmetry axis of the emitted beam comes through a physical center of the detector 14; [0059] the scanned object gets completely or partially exposed during every detector accumulation cycle.
[0060] The spiral motion of the emitter/source 12 for the system 10 is illustrated in
[0061] The reconstruction process for the present system 10 consists of three steps, with an optional fourth step. Step 1 is performing a tomosynthesis reconstruction process from an entire ensemble of projections. The result is a 3-D tomosynthesis image S.sub.full. Step 2 is to perform the tomosynthesis reconstruction process from the projections (input views) corresponding to 360-degree coverage and acquired at the start of the spiral trajectory. In the case of 720-degree scanning it is the first half of the trajectory. The result is 3D tomosynthesis image S.sub.1. Finally, Step 3 requires performing the tomosynthesis reconstruction process from the projections (input views) corresponding to 360-degree coverage and acquired at the end of the spiral trajectory. In the case of 720-degree scanning it is the last half of the trajectory. The result is 3D tomosynthesis image S.sub.2. Optionally, with a 720-degree scan, Step 4 requires getting a final reconstruction result S.sub.cleaned by the formula:
S.sub.cleaned=S.sub.1+S.sub.2−S.sub.full (4)
[0062] The theory behind formula (4) is as follows:
If a reconstructed layer is represented as:
L.sub.observed=L.sub.clean+A.sub.leak (5)
where [0063] L.sub.dean is a 2D attenuation map of the objects located within this layer (in-focus objects); [0064] A .sub.leak is the contribution of the objects, which are “leaking from other layers”.
Then, for images obtained as a result of Steps 1-3 described above, it can be written:
L.sub.observed,step1=L.sub.clean,step1+A.sub.leak,step1
L.sub.observed,step2=L.sub.clean,step2+A.sub.leak,step2
L.sub.observed,step3=L.sub.clean,step3+A.sub.leak,step3
A.sub.leak,step1=A.sub.leak,step2+A.sub.leak,step3 (6)
[0065] If it is assumed that L.sub.clean,step1 is approximately equal to L.sub.clean,step2 which is approximately equal to L.sub.clean,step3 (formula (7)), then the solution of the linear system equation (6) produces the formula (4) for L.sub.clean.
[0066] As stated below, the formula (7) is the only approximation. It is fair to assume that the reconstructed method listed above as Steps 1-4 provides a mitigation of the layer-leaking effect but not its complete removal.
[0067] Consider the goal of distinguishing the content of the current layer and the content “leaked from other layers”. In order to accomplish this goal, it is suggested visualizing images acquired on Steps 1-3 side-by-side or one under another with the possibility of switching between these views. This approach gives a person providing image analysis (e.g., radiologist) an idea about “real” and “leaked” content in the observed layer by noting differences between these pictures—i.e., “real content” stays basically the same, while “leaks” change significantly.
[0068] With reference to
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[0070] The following sources are indicated above as citations with a corresponding number and each is incorporated herein by reference: [0071] 1. The Utility of Digital Linear Tomosynthesis Imaging of Total Hip Joint Arthroplasty with Suspicion of Loosening: A Prospective Study in 40 Patients. Jan H. Göthlin and Mats Geijer. Biomed Res Int. 2013 [0072] 2. Digital Breast Tomosynthesis: State of the Art. Srinivasan Vedantham, Andrew Karellas , Gopal R. Vijayaraghavan, Daniel B. Kopans. RSNA online publication, Nov. 24 2015, https://doi.org/10.1148/radio1.2015141303 [0073] 3. Circular Tomosynthesis: Potential in Imaging of Breast and Upper Cervical Spine. Preliminary Phantom and in Vitro Study. Grant M Stevens 1, Robyn L Birdwell, Christopher F Beaulieu, Debra M Ikeda, Norbert J Pelc. Radiology, 2003 Aug;228(2):569-75 [0074] 4. Principles of Computerized Tomographic Imaging. Avinash C. Kak Malcolm Slaney. IEEE Press, 1988. [0075] 5. Filtered back-projection for digital breast tomosynthesis with 2D filtering. Sean D. Rose, Emil Y. Sidky, Ingrid S. Reiser, Xiaochuan Pan. Proceedings Volume 10948, Medical Imaging 2019: Physics of Medical Imaging; 1094851 (2019) [0076] 6. Filtered Backprojection for Modifying the Impulse Response of Circular Tomosynthesis. G. M. Stevens 1, R. Fahrig, N. J. Pelc. Med Phys., 2001 Mar; 28(3):372-80
[0077] The matter set forth in the foregoing description and accompanying drawings is offered by way of illustration only and not as a limitation. While particular embodiments have been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the broader aspects of applicants' contribution. The actual scope of the protection sought is intended to be defined in the following claims when viewed in their proper perspective based on the prior art.