Computertomografi (forkortet CT), opprinnelig Engelsk computed axial tomography (CAT) and body section roentgenography, er en radiologisk undersøkelsesmetode hvor det ved snittbilder (tomogram) lages bilder, som blir behandlet digitalt for å kunne fremstille kroppslige strukturer i forskjellige plan, eventuelt tredimensjonalt. Ordet tomogram er avledet fra gresk tomos (snitt) og graphia (beskrivelse). Selv om bruk av CT er mest vanlig innenfor helsevesenet, brukes det også innenfor andre områder, f.eks. nondestructive materials testing.
Førstegenerasjons CTskannere brukte en blyanttykk stråle som var rettet mot en eller to detektorer. Bildene ble laget ved hjelp av en "translata-rotate"/"oversett-roter" metode ved at strålekilden og detektoren ble fiksert i relative posisjoner som bevegde seg over pasienten, etterfulgt av en rotasjon av strålekilden/detektoren kombinert med en grad. Bildepar ble laget i løpet av ca 5 minutter.
Ved andregenerasjons CTskannere var antallet detektorer økt og man forandret formen på strålekilden. Strålekilden forandret seg fra en blyant-tykk stråle til en vifteformet stråle. "Translate/rotate"-metoden ble fortsatt brukt, men det var en signifikant nedgang i tiden maskinen brukte på å skanne. Rotasjonen var økt fra en grad til tretti grader.
The third generation of CT scanners made a dramatic change in the speed at which images could be obtained. In the third generation a fan shaped beam of x-rays was directed to an array of detectors that was fixed in position relative to the x-ray source. The slow "translate" portion of the scan was eliminated. Scan time per slice was reduced to 10 seconds initially.
The fourth generation of CT scanners achieved scan time similar to the third generation by employing a 360 degree ring of detectors that encircled the patient. The fan shaped x-ray beam rotated around the patient directed at detectors in a non-fixed relationship.
Improvements in CT scanner technology have developed with improvements in computer capabilities and detector technology and other improvements of movement of patients through the scanner.
Modern multi-detector, multi-row CT systems can complete a scan of the chest, for example, in less time than it takes for a single breath hold and display the computed images in near real time. Images that used to take hours to acquire and days to process are now accomplished in seconds. The number of cross sectional images that can be produced has increased from about a dozen to many hundreds.
In recent years, tomography has also been introduced on the micrometer level and is named Microtomography. But these machines are currently only fit for smaller objects or animals, and cannot yet be used on humans.
Newer machines with faster computer systems and newer software strategies can process not only individual cross sections but continuously changing cross sections as the gantry, with the object to be imaged, is slowly and smoothly slid through the X-ray circle. These are called helical or spiral CT machines. Their computer systems integrate the data of the moving individual slices to generate three dimensional volumetric information, in turn viewable from multiple different perspectives on attached CT workstation monitors.
E-Speed_EBT.jpgIn conventional CT machines, an X-Ray tube is physically rotated behind a circular shroud (see the image above right); in the less used electron beam tomography (EBT) the tube is far larger, note the internal funnel shape in the photo, with a hollow cross-section and only the electron current is rotated.
The data stream representing the varying radiographic intensity sensed reaching the detectors on the opposite side of the circle during each sweep— 360 or just over 180 degrees in conventional machines, 220 degree in EBT —is then computer processed to calculate cross-sectional estimations of the radiographic density, expressed in Hounsfield units.
CT is used in medicine as a diagnostic tool and as a guide for interventional procedures. Sometimes contrast materials such as intravenous iodinated contrast is used. This is useful to highlight structures such as blood vessels that otherwise would be difficult to delineate from their surroundings. Using contrast material can also help to obtain functional information about tissues.
Pixels in an image obtained by CT scanning are displayed in terms of relative radiodensity. The pixel itself is displayed according to the mean attenuation of the tissue that it corresponds to on a scale from −1024 to +3071 on the Hounsfield scale. Water has an attenuation of 0 Hounsfield units (HU) while air is −1000 HU, bone is typically +400 HU or greater and metallic implants are usually +1000 HU.
Due to improvements in CT technology the overall radiation dose and scan times have decreased and the ability to reconstruct images (for example, to look at the same location from a different angle) has increased over time. Still, the radiation dose from CT scans is several times higher than conventional X-ray scans.
As of 2005, the cost of an average CT scanner is US$1.3 million.
For detection of tumors, CT scanning with IV contrast is occasionally used but is less sensitive than magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
CT can also be used to detect increases in intracranial pressure, e.g. before lumbar puncture or to evaluate the functioning of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt.
CT is also useful in the setting of trauma for evaluating facial and skull fractures.
In the head/neck/mouth area, CT scanning is used for surgical planning for craniofacial and dentofacial deformities, evaluation of cysts and some tumors of the jaws/sinuses/nasal cavity/orbits, and for planning of dental implant reconstruction.
For evaluation of chronic interstitial processes (emphysema, fibrosis, and so forth), thin sections with high spatial frequency reconstructions are used. For evaluation of the mediastinum and hilar regions for lymphadenopathy, IV contrast is administered.
CT angiography of the chest (CTPA) is also becoming the primary method for detecting pulmonary embolism (PE) and aortic dissection, and requires accurately timed rapid injections of contrast and high-speed helical scanners. CT is the standard method of evaluating abnormalities seen on chest X-ray and of following findings of uncertain acute significance.
Dual Source CT scanners, introduced in 2005, allow higher temporal resolution when acquiring images of the heart, allowing a greater number of patients to be scanned.
CT has limited application in the evaluation av bekkenet. For the female pelvis in particular, ultrasound is the imaging modality of choice. Nevertheless, it may be part of abdominal scanning (e.g. for tumors), and has uses in assessing fractures.
CT is also used in osteoporose studies and research along side DXA scanning. Both CT and DXA can be used to asses bone mineral density (BMD) which is used to indicate bone strength, however CT results do not correlate exactly with DXA (the gold standard of BMD measurment), is far more expensive, and subjects patients to much higher levels of ionizing radiation, so it is used infrequently.
Computertomographie | Computed tomography | Tomografía axial computarizada | OTA | Tomographie axiale calculée | Tomografi terkomputasi | CAT-skanni | Tomografia assiale computerizzata | טומוגרפיה ממוחשבת | Komputertomográfia | Computertomografie | CT | Tomografia komputerowa | Tomografia computadorizada | Компьютерная томография | Počítačová tomografia | Datortomografi | கணிக்கப்பட்ட குறுக்குவெட்டு வரைவி வரிக் கண்ணோட்டம் | Bilgisayarlı tomografi | X射线断层成像
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