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Biomedical Imaging I X-Ray Imaging, Instrumentation Interactions between X-rays and Matter In the diagnostic range, below 200 keV, three mechanisms dominate the attenuation: • Coherent scattering, • Photoelectric absorbtion, • Compton Scattering For photon energies larger that 1 MeV another mechanism called Pair Production is the dominant interaction mechanism. 01/30 II.2 Coherent Scattering Occurs in low energy radiation that is not sufficient to eject the electrons out of orbit. It is the deflection of X-ray beams caused by atoms being excited by the incident radiation and then reemitting waves at the same wavelength. Relatively unimportant in the energies used for diagnostic radiology. Eg = hn - -K M L 01/30 - Eg ~ hn - - II.3 Photoelectric absorption (t) The photon knocks an electron out of one of the inner shells of a target atom. The photon is destroyed in the process. Desirable interaction for imaging. Eg = hn - -K M L - - - Ee Energy balance: - Ee Eg EI - - • The electron exits from its shell into the energy continuum (it leaves the field of the nucleus). • This process is possible for a given shell only if Eg IK, L, M,... • The process is most likely for Eg EK, L, M,... (resonance) • The cross section decreases with increasing photon energy • Increases strongly with Z (Z5), decreases with Eg (1/E3.5) 01/30 Zero N Continuum E M L K II.4 The remaining atom becomes a positively charged ion. Accompanying the ionization there occurs: 1) Characteristic radiation or fluorescent radiation in the form of X-ray photon will be emitted carrying an energy equal to the difference in energy between the outer shell electron and, for example, the L-shell electron. 2) Auger effect (an alternative to characteristic radiation) Energy released by the outer shell electron is transferred to another orbital electron. The orbital electron that acquires enough energy to escape is called Auger electron. 01/30 II.5 The photoelectric effect always yield three end products: 1)a photoelectron, 2) Characteristic radiation or Auger electrons 3) a positive ion. The photoelectric absorbtion is the most desirable type of interaction in X-ray imaging. X-ray photon is completely absorbed producing little scattered radiation (scattered radiation is dangerous for personnel and produce image noise) 01/30 II.6 Compton scattering (s) Scattering process: Photon “bounces off” atom and “survives”, momentum and energy are exchanged. In a Compton scattering process, an x-ray photon interacts with one of the weakly bound electrons of the atom. This electron can be considered free because Ex-ray 1-100 keV >> EI few eV. y Eg y Eg’ x x Ee Inelastic scattering process: Eg ' Eg Ee 01/30 Eg 1 (1 cos ) ; Eg me c 2 II.7 Compton Scattering The fractional change in wavelength and photon energy with angle varies significantly with the initial energy of the photon. 01/30 II.8 Relative Importance of two major type of Interactions 01/30 II.9 Pair production (k) If the photon energy Eg exceeds the value 2 mec2 = 1.02 MeV, an electron-positron pair can be produced with destruction of the photon. The kinetic energy of the resulting particles is given by Ee = Ep = Eg - 2 mec2 This process can take place only in interaction with a nucleus, to account for conservation of momentum and energy. The cross section for pair production is proportional to Z2 and dominates the interaction at very high energies (>5 MeV). 01/30 II.10 Cross sections for Different Processes / Materials L EDGE K EDGE Compton scattering Pair production Photoelectric absorbtion 01/30 II.11 X-Ray Generation X-ray Tube Working Principle: Accelerated charge causes EM radiation bombardment of a target material with a beam of fast electrons A C V - + Electrons are emitted thermally from a heated cathode (C) and are accelerated toward the anode target (A) by the applied voltage (aka potential) V (~kV). 01/30 II.13 Bremsstrahlung Continuous spectrum of EM radiation is produced by abrupt deceleration of charged particles (“Bremsstrahlung” is German for “braking radiation”). hn Deceleration is caused by deflection of electrons K in the Coulomb field of the nuclei Nucleus Most of the energy is converted into heat, <~1% is x-ray The energy of the generated x–ray photon is given by energy conservation: The maximum energy for the produced photon is given by: 01/30 K’ hn K K ' Emax hn K e V II.14 X-Ray Tube Spectrum Bremsstrahlung creates a continuous spectrum ("white radiation") from E=0 to Emax with I 1/E. The efficiency for bremsstrahlung generation increases with Z, therefore heavy metals are used in x-ray tubes. absorbed by tube material 01/30 II.15 Characteristic radiation Characteristic narrow lines of intense x-ray are superimposed on the continuous bremsstrahlung spectrum. These lines are caused by photons that are released when an electron is knocked out of an inner shell and replaced by one “dropping down” from a higher shell. The photon energy corresponds to the energy difference between the shells, causing distinct narrow lines in the spectrum. Lines are named after the lower shell involved. Dn=1 -transitions, Dn=2 b-transitions, ... hn - -K M L - - - - Continuum 0.5 3 Kg b K 11 Kb L-lines Tungsten (74W) 01/30 E [keV] M L - Zero N b g K 70 K-lines II.16 Realization of X-Ray Tube • Desired: Point source (less blurring) electrostatic focusing of electrons (cathode geometry) • Limit: potential melting of anode can increase heat dissipation by imbedding of target (i.e., tungsten) in copper, rotating target, angled target surface. • Tubes come with two or more focal spots of different sizes (low power, sharp high power, blurry) 01/30 II.17 Spot Size / Heel Effect Anode angle reduces apparent spot size Tradeoff: restricted usable area of image plane because of uneven intensity (“heel effect”) 01/30 II.18 Magnification and Image Blur Geometric magnification given by I A B M O A Blurring of edges and fine structures due to finite source size causes penumbra of width ps ,O B A I 01/30 p II.19 X-Ray Tube Spectra • Filtering: Selection of lines, suppression of low-energy x-ray: Cu, Al (Mo in mammography) • Tube window glass, metal (4Be in mammography) • Voltage tuning 01/30 II.20 X-ray Tube ratings Factors effecting X-ray Intensity: • Filament temperature controlled by the filament current (few amperes ac or dc) • The potential difference between anode and cathode (150 kV peak for chest, 30 kV peak for mammography) • The target material (should have high atomic number) For a fixed filament current, the intensity I I irradiated by the X-ray tube is : I = Z x tube current (mA) x (kVp)2 x F atomic number 01/30 tube voltage rectification factor (1 for DC) II.21 X-Ray Detection Radiography Few high-quality images are made in a study • Orthopedic • Chest • Abdomen • (Mammography) 01/30 II.23 Photographic Film • Photographic film can be exposed by x-ray directly. • Increased sensitivity to light was noted when silver (Ag) is combined with a halogen element. Such a combination or comund is known as silver halide (ex: AgCl, AgBr, AgI). • It is necessary to use a ‘binder’_an inert substance which will envelope the silver halide crystals_ commonly called grains_ holding them evenly suspended and attached to the support. Gelatin was found as a binding material with ideal properties. • The combination of silver halides suspended in gelatin is known as silver halide emulsion. • Film Composition: • Transparent plastic substrate (acetate, polyester) • Coated on both sides with light-sensitive emulsion (gelatin, silver halide crystals (AgBr) 0.1-1 mm). 01/30 Exposure to light splits ions atomic silver appears black (negative film) II.24 AgBr Crystal 01/30 II.25 Silver Image formation theory (M. J. Langford) 01/30 II.26 The role of silver in photography (M. J. Langford) 01/30 II.27 Film characteristics • Blackening depending on deposited energy (E = It) • Optical Density (measure of film blackness): D = log 10(Ii/It)=log10 opacity Ii 01/30 Film • D > 2: “black,” D = 0.25 - 0.3: “transparent” (or “white”) with standard light box (useful diagnostic range ~0.5 - ~2.5) It II.28 Film Characteristic Curve (H and D Curve) I Gives relationship between film exposure and optical density D Characteristics: • Fog: D at zero exposure (higher the fog level faster the photographic mat) • Sensitivity (speed S ): Reciprocal of X-ray exposure E in Röntgen ( R*) needed to produce a density D of 1 S = 1/E • Linear region E 1R= dose required to produce 2.08x109 ionization in 1 cm3 air (2.5810-4 Coulomb/kg in air under 760 mm Hg ambient pressure, 0 °C) 01/30 II.29 Film Characteristic Curve II • Gamma (maximum slope) g D2 D1 log E2 log E1 • Latitude (range of exposure creating appreciable values of D [~0.5 - ~2.5]) • Contrast (curve gradient, DD/D log E Latitude) Film gamma 01/30 Contrast, latitude II.30 Film Resolution Light sensitivity is directly related to the grain size and the number, thickness of sensitive layers (interaction volume) Double sided Single sided In both cases, increasing sensitivity decreases resolution Tradeoff between sensitivity resolution 01/30 II.31 Grains (M. J. Langford) 01/30 II.32 Fluorescent Screens Low x-ray sensitivity of film Fluorescent screens (“phosphors”) are used to convert x-ray energy to light. • Fluorescence: The particles produced by x-ray interaction (electrons, photons) lose part of their energy by exiting the valence electrons in the medium, which upon relaxation emit light. • Conversion efficiency: Fraction of the absorbed x-ray energy converted to light. • CaWO2 (Calcium tungstate):20-50% radiates ultraviolet and blue • Rare earth phosphors: LaOBr (blue), Gd2O2S (green), Y2O2S:Tb: 12 - 18% La: Lantanum, Gd: Gadolinium, Tb: Terbium, Yt: Ytrium • Quantum efficiency: Fraction of incident x-rays that interact with screen (30 - 60%). 01/30 II.33 Screen / Film Combinations • Sandwiching phosphor and film in light-tight cassette or a film between two screens. Major advantage: reduce the exposure required to form an image • Resolution vs. sensitivity: • Most x-rays are absorbed close to the entrance surface. Lateral light spread degrades spatial resolution. The light intensity emitted by screen is linearly dependent on x-ray intensity. • Thicker screen increases sensitivity (larger interaction volume) but degrades resolution due to light scatter / lateral spread Film emulsion Light-tight cassette Foam X ray X-ray photons Crystals Phosphor screen Film Light spread Tradeoff between sensitivity resolution 01/30 II.34 Characteristics of Fluorescent Screen Optimizing sensitivity: • Fluorescence wavelengths are chosen to match spectral sensitivity of film: CaWO2: 350nm - 580nm, peak @ 430 nm (blue) Rare earths: green - blue • Dual-coated film, two screen layers • Optically reflective layers cassette photoreflective layer fluorescent screen Tradeoff between photosensitive layer film substrate sensitivity resolution dose image quality 01/30 II.35 Fluoroscopy Lower x-ray levels are produced continuously and many images must be presented almost immediately • Angiography 01/30 II.36 Image Intensifier Image intensifier tubes convert the x-ray image into a small bright optical image, which can then be recorded using a TV camera. 1,5-2 cm 15 - 30 cm • Conversion of x-ray energy to light in the input phosphor screen (CsI) • Emission of low-energy electrons by photo-emissive layer (Sb : Antimony) • Acceleration (to enhance brightness) and focusing of electrons on output phosphor screen (ZnCdS) • The ratio of image brightness of the two phosphors is called the brightness gain of the intensifier tube 01/30 II.37 Scintillation Detector X-ray photon Scintillation crystal like NaI emit light photons in proportion to the absorbed x-ray photon energy The photocathode is coated with a Scintillation photoemission material that emits electrons crystal when striken by light photons in proportion to the Photocathode intensity of the light. (grounded) The electrons will be accelerated toward the first dynode (V1) which is covered by a material that emits secondary electrons when striken by an electron. The number of electrons are multiplied when they are propagating down the tube. V1 V2 Vn Anode (1200 V) The output current is proportional to the number of x-ray photons. 01/30 II.38 Photocathode : Quantum efficiency of a photocathode = number of photoelectrons emitted / number of incident photons Practical photocathodes show maximum quantum efficiencies of 20-30% Dynode: Conventional dynode materials are BeO, MgO, Cs3Sb The multiplication factor for a single dynode is given by = number of secondary electrons emitted / primary incident electron If N stages are provided in the multiplier section, the overall gain for the PM tube is N. Conventional dynode materials are characterized by a typical value of =5. Ten stages will therefore result in an overall tube gain of 510 or 10 7. 01/30 II.39 t h e Limits of Analog Systems s i g n a l (Screen/film, intensifiers): d e g r a d a t i o n • Film has limited latitude, • Film acts as detector, storage, display, t h a t • Development, storage, o c c u r s • Many steps involved, loss in image information, w i t h • Analog noise e a c h 01/30 c o m p o n e n t c II.40 01/30 II.41 Comparison Analog - Digital © GE Medical Systems 01/30 II.42 Digital Image Detectors (CCD Based, I) • Charge coupled detector (CCD): • IC detector comprising a photodiode, a charging circuit, a capacitor and a charge transfer circuit (MOS capacitor). Phosphor is optically coupled by lens or fiber taper to 1k×1k CCD array (realtime imaging). 01/30 II.43 CCD must perform 4 tasks to generate an image: • Generate Charge --> Photoelectric Effect • Collect Charge --> pixels: an array of electrodes (called gates) • Transfer Charge --> Apply a differential voltage across gates. Signal electrons move down vertical registers (columns) to horizontal register. Each line is serially read out by an on-chip amplifier. • Detect Charge --> individual charge packets are converted to an output voltage and then digitally encoded 01/30 II.44 Digital Image Detectors (CCD Based, II) 01/30 II.45 Digital Image Detectors (non-CCD) • CsI layer deposited directly on array of photodiodes with switching matrix [GE 2000, first FDA approved fully digital system (11 yrs, $130 million)] • Direct conversion of x-ray into charge (lead iodide, selenium, zinc cadmium telluride, thallium bromide) 01/30 II.46 Putting it all together: Mammography Used for detection and diagnosis (symptomatic and screening) of breast cancer, pre-surgical localization of suspicious areas, and guidance of needle biopsies. Breast cancer is detected on the basis of four types of signs on the mammogram: • Characteristic morphology of a tumor mass • Presentation of mineral deposits called microcalcifications • Architectural distortions of normal tissue patterns • Asymmetry between corresponding regions of images on the left and right breast Need for good image contrast of various tissue types. Simple x-ray shadowgram from a quasi-point source. Structures are magnified depending on distance to breast-image receptor. 01/30 II.47 Mammography Contrast Image contrast is due to varying linear attenuation coefficient of different types of tissue in the breast (adipose tissue (fat), fibroglandular, tumor). Contrast decreases toward higher energies the recommended optimum for mammography is in the region 18 - 23 keV depending on tissue thickness and composition. 01/30 II.48 X-ray Projection Angiography Concerned with diseases of the circulatory system. Contrast material is used to opacify vascular structures of interest. Contrast agent is an iodine-containing compound with maximum iodine (Z=53) concentration of ~350 mg/cm3. Important application is monitoring of therapeutic manipulations (angioplasty, atherectomy, intraluminal stents, catheter placement). Source produces short, intense pulses to produce clear images of moving vessels. Pulse duration ranges from 100-200 ms (for cerebral studies) to 5-10 ms (for cardiac studies). 01/30 II.49 Biological Effects of X-Ray Units Intensity [W/cm2]: Power per unit area = number of photons [n] photon energy [hn] / time [t] / area [A] A hn n Roentgen [R]: Measure of energy (It): the amount of radiation that produces 2.5810-4 Coulomb [C] of charge separation in air @ standard conditions. 01/30 II.51 Two different materials, if subjected to the same exposure, will in general absorb different amounts of energy. Because many important phenomena, including changes in physical properties or induced chemical reactions, would be expected to scale as the energy absorbed per unit mass of the material, a unit that measures this quantity is of fundamental interest. Absorbed Radiation Dose [rad]: Defines the absorbed energy (dependent on target medium): 1 rad = 0.01 joule absorbed by 1 kg of material. 1 Gray [Gy] = 100 rad. 01/30 II.52 Determinants of Biological Effects • Damage depends on deposited (= absorbed) energy (intensity time) per tissue volume. • Threshold: No known minimum level below which no damage occurs. • Exposure time directly effects • Exposed area: The larger the exposed area the greater the damage (collimators, shields!). • Variation in Species / Individuals: • Variation in cell sensitivity: Most sensitive are nonspecialized, rapidly dividing cells (Most sensitive: White blood cells, red blood cells, epithelial cells. Less sensitive: Muscle, nerve cells) • Short/long term effects: Short-term effects for unusually large (> 100 rad) doses (nausea, vomiting, fever, shock, death). Long-term effects (carcinogenic/genetic effects) even for diagnostic levels maximum allowable dose 5 R/yr or 0.2 R/working day [Nat. Counc. on Rad. Prot. and Meas.] 01/30 II.53 Radiation Dose for Various X-Ray Procedures X-ray procedure/exposure 01/30 Exposure [mR] Chest 20 Brain 250 Abdomen 550 Dental 650 Breast 54 Xeromammography 200 CT/slice 1000 II.54 Effects of ionizing radiation on the living tissue Direct effects: Indirect effects: Effects on the macromolecules (for example, protein, RNA, DNA) of cells. The effects on the proteins can be repaired by the cell. However, effects on DNA can not be repaired yielding genetic mutation and death of the cell. Effects on the water molecules. 80% of human body is made up of water. Water molecules are converted to other molecules (H and free radical OH ) with incoming radiation. The excess energy of these molecules may affect the other molecules and break their molecular bonds yielding toxic molecules (H2O2). 01/30 II.55