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Resident Physics Lectures

Resident Physics Lectures. Fluoroscopic Imaging. George David Associate Professor of Radiology Medical College of Georgia. The Bad Ol’ Days. Radiology directly viewed fluorescent screen screen covered with lead glass for protection low light levels

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Resident Physics Lectures

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  1. Resident Physics Lectures Fluoroscopic Imaging George David Associate Professor of Radiology Medical College of Georgia

  2. The Bad Ol’ Days • Radiology directly viewed fluorescent screen • screen covered with lead glass for protection • low light levels • 10-30 minute dark adaptation required by wearing red goggles

  3. Human eye light receptors • rods (scotopic vision) • respond to very low light levels • night vision • peripheral vision • sensitive to blue-green wavelengths • poor visual acuity • poor gray shade detection • cones (photopic vision) • high direct vision acuity • blind at low illumination levels

  4. Image Intensifiers • evacuated glass envelope • vacuum tube

  5. Image Intensifier • Glass tube • 2 to 4 mm thick • curved bottom • lead lined • protects operator from stray radiation • lined with “mu” metal • protects image tube from defocusing stray magnetic fields

  6. Image Intensifier Components • input phosphor • x-rays to light • photocathode • light to electrons • electrostatic focusing lens • steer those electrons • accelerating anode • speed up those electrons • output phosphor • electrons to light

  7. Input Phosphor x-rays ==> light • cesium iodide (CsI) • CsI crystal needles perpendicular to substrate • minimizes lateral light diffusion or scattering • improves resolution • typical image tube resolution • 3 - 5 line pairs / mm

  8. Input Phosphor absorption • K-Edge of phosphors • CS ==> (36 keV) • I ==> 33.2 keV • well suited to average fluoro beam energy • 30 to 40 keV • absorbs ~ 2/3 of incident beam energy

  9. Photocathode light photons ==> electrons • attached directly to input phosphor • minimizes light diffusion • photoemissive metal • light causes emission of photoelectrons • # photoelectrons emitted proportional to incident light from input phosphor

  10. lenses + + + + - - Electrostatic Focusing Lens • Several electrodes plated to inside of glass envelope • + voltage applied to electrodes • each electrode at different voltage • voltages determine magnification mode • focuses each point of input phosphor to a point on output phosphor • inverts & reverses image

  11. Accelerating Anode • in neck of image tube • + 25 - 35 kV charge • accelerates electrons • faster electrons produce more light when they strike output phosphor

  12. Output Phosphor Output Phosphor electrons ==> light • Small viewable fluorescent screen • 0.5 - 1 inch diameter • converts electron’s kinetic energy to light • ~ 50 fold increase in # light photons over input phosphor

  13. - Output Phosphor • thin aluminum layer on back of output phosphor • prevents screen’s light from going back through tube and reaching input phosphor Output Phosphor X Aluminum

  14. Output phosphor viewing • direct • uses lenses & mirrors • television • high quality closed circuit television chain

  15. Image Intensifier - TV Coupling Using a Lens • lens coupling • Fiber Optic

  16. Fiber Optic II - TV Coupling • cannot record image directly from image tube • All recording done from TV TV Fiber Optic Bundle

  17. Image Tube Parameters • Brightness Gain • ratio of II brightness to a “standard” screen • Conversion Factor • light output per radiation rate input • Change in time • 10% decline in brightness / year typical • must increase patient exposure to get same light intensity

  18. II Gain (Intensification Factor) Output phosphor brightness-------------------------------------- “standard” screen brightness • typically ~ 10,000

  19. II Gain (Intensification Factor) • Brightness gain = minification gain X flux gain • Minification gain • making image smaller also makes it brighter • Flux gain • acceleration of electrons toward output phosphor

  20. Minification A/B • Minification Factor = Diameter of (effective) input phosphor---------------------------------------------- Diameter of output phosphor • Minification Factor Changes with Magnification Mode! • Effective input phosphor diameter decreases with magnification • so does image tube gain B A

  21. Minification • Minification Factor = Diameter of (effective) input phosphor--------------------------------------------- Diameter of output phosphor • Area Reduction Factor • gain proportional to area reduction factor • equals [minification factor] 2 OR Area of (effective) input phosphor----------------------------------------- Area of output phosphor

  22. Minification Gain • image brighter because output screen smaller than input screen • changes with magnification mode (9”, 6”, etc) • changes by about 2X for each mag mode • typically 81 for 9” mode (output phosphor about 1” diam) • 36 for 6” mode • 16 for 4” mode Highest magnification Lowest Minification gain Lowest magnification Highest Minification gain

  23. Flux Gain • Caused by high voltage of anode • acceleration of electrons in tube • Does not change with magnification mode • typical value ~ 50

  24. Light Meter Lead Contrast • Ratio of brightness at center of image with & without blocking center • Typically 10:1 to 20:1 • Degrades over time

  25. Other II Characteristics • Lag • persistence of illumination after irradiation • insignificant for modern tubes • Distortion • electron steering better in center than in periphery • unequal magnification • straight lines appear bent • pincushion effect

  26. Vignetting • loss of brightness in image periphery • caused by • periphery displayed over larger area of input screen • decreases brightness • poorer periphery focus

  27. 9 “ 6” Multi-Field Image Tubes • Dual, 3X, 4X field sizes common • Image focused by adjusting voltage on focusing electrodes (electronic lenses) • By law, collimators must cone in during mag operation • X-ray field should match imaged field

  28. 9 “ 6” Magnification • Advantages • Magnifies anatomy • improves spatial resolution • Disadvantages • smaller field of view • increased radiation intensity (but less tissue exposed) • decreased minification gain

  29. Large Field of View II’s • Applications • digital imaging • angiography • digital spots • 12”, 14”, 16” available • Construction • metal often used instead of glass for strength • Advantage • large field of view • Disadvantage • expensive • bulky / heavy

  30. The Trend Flat Panel Digital Technology

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