新しい医療画像技術の開発 (UH Researchers Paving the Way for New Era in Medical Imaging)

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2025-02-25 ヒューストン大学(UH)

新しい医療画像技術の開発 (UH Researchers Paving the Way for New Era in Medical Imaging)
Phase contrast and color X-ray imaging system Das uses in her research

ヒューストン大学の研究者たちは、医療画像診断の新時代を切り開く技術を開発しました。ムーアズ教授であるミニ・ダス氏のチームは、フォトンカウント検出器と新しいアルゴリズムを組み合わせ、複数のエネルギーレベルのX線を同時に取得することで、異なる組織や造影剤の3D可視化を実現しました。これにより、骨折や癌などの小さな損傷の検出が向上し、より迅速で正確、かつコスト効率の高い診断が可能となります。さらに、この技術は材料イメージング、セキュリティのための手荷物検査、地球物理学的イメージング、マイクロ・ナノエレクトロニクスのイメージングなど、多くの産業分野への応用が期待されています。

<関連情報>

フォトンカウンティング 検出器と応用 Photon Counting: Detectors and Applications

Patrick J. La Riviere, Mini Das
Journal of Medical Imaging  Published:30 December 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JMI.11.S1.S12801

Abstract

The editorial introduces the special issue on photon counting detectors and applications.

Over the last few years, photon counting detectors (PCDs) have made the transition from research lab to clinical prototypes and are on the verge of FDA clearance for commercial computed tomography (CT) scanners. By logging each individual photon into one or more energy bins, such detectors offer significant potential advantages over traditional energy-integrating detectors (EIDs). EIDs simply sum the energy deposited by all the photons interacting during a given sensing interval, making it impossible to distinguish the energy of the individual photons. Worse, the signal is energy-weighted, which overemphasizes the higher-energy photons that typically carry the least tissue contrast information. Finally, this integrated, non-optimally weighted signal is then read out through electronics that contribute additional electronic noise.

By contrast, PCDs attempt to sense the individual pulse created by each interacting photon, comparing it to one or more thresholds to distinguish real events from noise and, in spectral PCDs, to assign photons to one or more energy bins. Such spectral bins allow objects to be decomposed quantitatively into multiple tissue and contrast agent materials, allowing for new kinds of studies such as virtual non—contrast exams, where iodinated contrast agents can be removed computationally from images, obviating the need for a second pre-contrast scan. PCDs have also shown promise for phase X-ray retrieval methods and fast spectroscopic methods.

Despite their promise, PCDs face challenges. At high count rates, the pulses pile up faster than the electronics can process, leading either to dead time or erroneous energy estimates. A common way to reduce the count rate per pixel is to make the pixels smaller, which has led to ultra-high resolution CT, a mode that many clinicians find just as promising as the spectral exams. PCDs also suffer charge sharing between pixels that compromises spectral resolution. These distortions (in particular charge sharing) can be partially corrected with changes in the detector hardware. However, the distortions are coupled with other spectral distortions due to beam hardening, fluorescence from the sensor material, and spectral changes in object scatter. Thus, the benefits of PCDs can be flux dependent and significantly lower than what is theoretically predicted unless accurate correction methods are implemented.

The papers in this JMI special issue span a range of topics of interest in PCD research. Some address fundamental questions about detector operations, such as choosing the number of energy bins in the paper by Taguchi or assessing detectors under pileup conditions in the paper by Leibold et al. Other papers, such as those by Fan et al. and Liu et al., evaluate the use of PCDs in new commercial scanners. A set of papers contributes to algorithmic work in denoising (Chang et al.) or improved spectral correction, optimization, and quantification (Wang et al. and Luna and Das).

Looking forward, papers by DeBrosse et al. and Jadick et al. consider the potential for non-spectral PCDs in comparison with or combination with emerging imaging modalities such as x-ray fluorescence CT and dual energy kilovoltage-megavoltage CT. Finally, Larsson et al. consider the use of PCDs in an important clinical application: estimating proton stopping powers in the context of proton radiotherapy. It seems inevitable that PCDs will soon find widespread use in clinical and industrial imaging and these papers provide a timely snapshot of this exciting transition.

1700応用理学一般
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