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Digital x-ray tomosynthesis: current state of the art and clinical potential

REVIEW ARTICLE

James T Dobbins III1,2 and Devon J Godfrey2

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TOPICAL REVIEW

Digital x-ray tomosynthesis is a technique for producing slice images using conventional x-ray systems. It is a refinement of conventional geometric tomography, which has been known since the 1930s. In conventional geometric tomography, the x-ray tube and image receptor move in synchrony on opposite sides of the patient to produce a plane of structures in sharp focus at the plane containing the fulcrum of the motion; all other structures above and below the fulcrum plane are blurred and thus less visible in the resulting image. Tomosynthesis improves upon conventional geometric tomography in that it allows an arbitrary number of in-focus planes to be generated retrospectively from a sequence of projection radiographs that are acquired during a single motion of the x-ray tube. By shifting and adding these projection radiographs, specific planes may be reconstructed. This topical review describes the various reconstruction algorithms used to produce tomosynthesis images, as well as approaches used to minimize the residual blur from out-of-plane structures. Historical background and mathematical details are given for the various approaches described. Approaches for optimizing the tomosynthesis image are given. Applications of tomosynthesis to various clinical tasks, including angiography, chest imaging, mammography, dental imaging and orthopaedic imaging, are also described.


PACS

87.59.bf Digital radiography

07.85.-m X- and γ-ray instruments

87.57.N- Image analysis

Subjects

Instrumentation and measurement

Medical physics

Dates

Issue 19 (7 October 2003)

Received 7 April 2003

Published 16 September 2003



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