先进的x射线成像技术。

Daniela Pfeiffer, Franz Pfeiffer, Ernst Rummeny
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引用次数: 12

摘要

自从威廉·康拉德(Wilhelm Conrad)于1895年Röntgen发现x射线以来,x射线已成为当今最广泛使用、通常最快、通常最具成本效益的医学成像方式。从早期使用x射线胶片作为探测器的放射学方法,医疗x射线成像设备的组合发展成为各种应用的大范围专用仪器。虽然x射线成像已经走过了很长的路,但x射线的一些物理性质尚未得到充分利用,这可能为进一步增强现有x射线成像设备提供了相当大的空间。首先,今天的x射线成像主要是黑白的,尽管x射线发生器实际上产生了全光谱的x射线能量,并且x射线在人体内发生的相互作用对于所有能量和每种物质都是不一样的。利用这些光谱依赖性不仅可以获得黑白CT图像,还可以获得更多的分子特异性信息,这在肿瘤精确放射学中尤其相关。x射线的第二个方面,也是迄今为止在放射学中主要被忽视和未被利用的,是这样一个物理事实,即x射线也可以用波图像来解释,而不仅仅是目前用粒子图像来解释。如果将x射线解释为波,就像可见光一样,x射线在物质中经历相移,如果利用得当,可以产生一类新的x射线图像,然后描绘x射线与物质的波相互作用,而不仅仅是衰减特性,就像目前所做的那样。
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Advanced X-ray Imaging Technology.

Since their discovery by Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen in 1895, X-rays have become the most widely available, typically fastest, and usually most cost-effective medical imaging modality today. From the early radiographic approaches using X-ray films as detectors, the portfolio of medical X-ray imaging devices developed into a large range of dedicated instrumentation for various applications. While X-ray imaging has come a long way, there are some physical properties of X-rays, which have not yet been fully exploited, and which may offer quite some room for further enhancements of current X-ray imaging equipment. Firstly, X-ray imaging today is mainly black and white, despite the fact that X-ray generators actually create a full spectrum of X-ray energies, and that the interactions of X-rays that occur within the human body are not the same for all energies and every material. Exploiting these spectral dependencies allows to not only obtain a black and white CT image, but also to obtain more molecularly specific information, which is relevant particularly in oncological precision radiology. The second aspect of X-rays, and so far in radiology mainly neglected and unused, is the physical fact that X-rays can also be interpreted in the wave picture, and not only as presently been done in the particle picture. If interpreted as waves, X-rays-just like visible light-experience a phase shift in matter, and this-if exploited correctly-can produce a new class of X-ray images, which then depict the wave interactions of X-rays with matter, rather than only the attenuating properties, as done until now.

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