Motion Artifacts in Subsecond Conventional CT and Electron-Beam CT: Pictorial Demonstration of Temporal Resolution
- 1 November 2000
- journal article
- Published by Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) in RadioGraphics
- Vol. 20 (6) , 1675-1681
- https://doi.org/10.1148/radiographics.20.6.g00nv131675
Abstract
To visually demonstrate the effective temporal resolution of subsecond conventional (slip-ring) and electron-beam computed tomographic (CT) systems, two phantoms containing high-contrast test objects were scanned with a slip-ring CT system (effective exposure time, 0.5 second) and an electron-beam CT system (exposure time, 0.1 second). Images were acquired of each phantom at rest, during translation along the x axis at speeds of 10–100 mm/sec, and during rotation about isocenter at speeds of 0.1 and 0.5 revolution per second. Motion artifacts and loss of spatial resolution were judged to be absent, noticeable, or severe. For 0.5-second conventional CT images, motion artifacts and loss of spatial resolution were noticeable at 10 mm/sec and 0.1 revolution per second and were severe at speeds greater than or equal to 20 mm/sec and at 0.5 revolution per second. For 0.1-second electron-beam CT scans, noticeable, but not severe, motion artifacts and loss of spatial resolution occurred at speeds between 40 and 100 mm/sec and at 0.5 revolution per second. Over the range of physiologic speeds examined, the images provide visually compelling evidence of the effect of improving temporal resolution in CT.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- In-Plane Coronary Arterial Motion Velocity: Measurement with Electron-Beam CTRadiology, 2000
- Coronary Artery Motion in Electron Beam TomographyJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 2000
- Segmental and Subsegmental Pulmonary Arteries: Evaluation with Electron-Beam versus Spiral CTRadiology, 2000
- Quantitative pulmonary imaging: Spatial and temporal considerations in high-resolution CTAcademic Radiology, 1998
- Quantification of in‐plane motion of the coronary arteries during the cardiac cycle: Implications for acquisition window duration for MR flow quantificationJournal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 1998
- Minimum scan speeds for suppression of motion artifacts in CT.Radiology, 1992