Dual energy computed tomography (DECT) has been shown to provide additional image information compared to conventional CT and has been used in clinical routine for several years. The objective of this work is to present a DECT implementation for a Small Animal Radiation Research Platform (SARRP) and to verify it with a quantitative analysis of a material phantom and a qualitative analysis with anmouse measurement.For dual energy imaging, two different spectra are required, but commercial small animal irradiators are usually not optimized for DECT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the field of preclinical radiotherapy, many new developments were driven by technical innovations. To make research of different groups comparable in that context and reliable, high quality has to be maintained. Therefore, standardized protocols and programs should be used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe recent progress in photon-counting detector technology using high-Z semiconductor sensors provides new possibilities for spectral x-ray imaging. The benefits of the approach to extract spectral information directly from measurements in the projection domain are very advantageous for material science studies with x-rays as polychromatic artifacts like beam-hardening are handled properly. Since related methods require accurate knowledge of all energy-dependent system parameters, we utilize an adapted semi-empirical model, which relies on a simple calibration procedure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe performance of a recently introduced spectral computed tomography system based on a dual-layer detector has been investigated. A semi-anthropomorphic abdomen phantom for CT performance evaluation was imaged on the dual-layer spectral CT at different radiation exposure levels (CTDI of 10 mGy, 20 mGy and 30 mGy). The phantom was equipped with specific low-contrast and tissue-equivalent inserts including water-, adipose-, muscle-, liver-, bone-like materials and a variation in iodine concentrations.
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