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San Diego CT - Computed Tomography Imaging, Emission Computed Tomography imaginghealthcare.com | Firelands - Positron Emission Tomography (PET)/Computed Tomography (CT) firelands.com | PET/CT - Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography... radiology-info.org | Laughlin Memorial Hospital | Services | PET/CT Scan (Positron Emission... laughlinmemorial.org |
[edit] AccessibilityThis is a great article, but it does read a little too much like a users manual. I have a lot of knowledge of physics, and was able to understand it. However, I suggest it could be altered to be a little more "novice friendly." A lot of people with little knowledge of physics or medicine probably look up "CT scan" when their doc asks for one, and this article seems like it is a little hard to grasp. Some more "layman friendly" terminology might help. Just an idea for you guys who understand this stuff way better than me. Police Cat (talk) 21:34, 22 December 2008 (UTC) Actually, we don't. It would be great if you could hop in there and start re-writing some of the thick stuff. (Me too, I guess). Ratagonia (talk) 22:15, 22 December 2008 (UTC) [edit] VandalismThis needs to be fixed... "CT scanner was "the greatest legacy" of the Beatles, with the massive profits resulting from their record sales enabled EMI to fund scientific research[1]," —Preceding unsigned comment added by 128.12.119.156 (talk) 12:10, 9 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Radiation ExposureThe radiaiton dosages are off, see the latest from teh ACR, RSNA and health physics society. CT abdomen for example is one of the most commonly ordered CT's and it has radiation of ~10 MsV's not 5.3. http://www.radiologyinfo.org/en/safety/index.cfm?pg=sfty_xray#3 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.252.106.20 (talk) 18:57, 26 February 2009 (UTC) Suggest including comparison of the raditation in a CT scan to the background radiation in the atmosphere one recieves (i.e. ?possible 1 CT equivalent of 3 years of background radition one recieves from the atmosphere) would be interesting.216.95.114.241 06:52, 8 December 2006 (UTC) Can someone verify the numbers for radiation exposure? I have heard that PET is much safer than CT but the numbers here don't show that... cbm 03:16, 16 Sep 2004 (UTC) I presume the cost given for a scanner ($1.3 million) is in US Dollars? I'd add it myself but don't want to include incorrect information. --Roisterer 04:22, 5 Oct 2004 (UTC) Radiation doses from PET and CT cover a wide range depending on the exact type of investigation being conducted but, in the UK at least, are roughly the same. Both investigations give doses several times greater than a conventional planar x-ray.
I don't think the article is significantly in error. The estimate of 0.085 mSv for a chest X-ray exam seems quite high. Surveys in the UK, and Europe, suggest that 0.02 mSv is typical. As a cardiac CT can reach doses of 13-18 mSv, I don't think the claim of 500 Chest X-rays is totally unreasonable. Although I grant that it may be misinterpreted. Perhaps the wording should be changed. CT radiation dose depends on many factors, not just the length covered. A cardiac scan is a very different protocol to a chest scan, and a 'high-resolution' chest CT is very different to a 'normal' chest CT. Cardiac CT is difficult because the heart moves, but to ensure diagnostic images the data for image reconstruction must be obtained at the same point in the cardiac cycle. This invariably means that the scanner must discard some of the data it gathers (e.g. when the heart is contracting), or it must scan the area multiple times. A typical approach is to scan slowly through the heart, so that the entire heart is covered about 4 times over about 5-10 beats. This increases the radiation burden significantly. Additionally, because cardiac CT needs high spatial resolution, and high contrast resolution, a high radiation exposure is needed to achieve this (due to shot noise effects).
'High-resoution' chest CT has a considerably lower radiation dose than a 'normal' chest CT because it is a different technique. Most commonly in chest CT, you are looking for soft-tissue abnormalities, or small abnormalities - e.g. tumous, infection, enlarged lymph nodes. This needs good contrast resolution, and also requires that the entire chest is covered (so that a small tumor isn't missed). 'High-resolution' CT takes extremely fine sections through the chest so that high z-axis resolution is obtained - this allows the fine detail in the airspaces of the lungs to be seen. Additionally, because you are looking at air spaces, there is naturally very high contrast between the tissue and air. High inherent contrast means that less radiation exposure is necessary to obtain a diagnostic contrast-noise ratio. Additionally, because HR CT is only looking for generalised lung disease, it isn't necessary to scan the whole chest - it's typical to take 1mm sections every 10 mm (so you only scan 10% of the chest). Modern MSCT scanners do allow the option of scanning the entire-chest in 'high-resolution' mode - but they do so by destroying the dose advantage. Dual source scanners do have the potential to bring significant dose benefits - because their faster acquisition means that less data must be discarded due to movement. Some manufacturers are looking at volumetric CT for their next-gen products - it has been reported that a 256 slice volumetric scanner can perform an entire cardiac study in the time between 2 beats. The advantage of this is that there is no repeated exposure, and a significantly reduced radiation dose. ChumpusRex 19:08, 4 September 2006 (UTC) Which mSv value is correct? I've noticed the mSv rating for a chest x-ray is currently given two different values (as of 5/28/2007 8:20 PM CST). The following is stated in the cardiac section of diagnostic use, "For the sake of comparison, a chest X-ray carries a dose of approximately 0.1 to 0.2 mSv." However, the value of only 0.02 is given in the typical scan doses table further down the page. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.175.124.251 (talk)
Error in risk calculation? Is the quoted risk of 1 cancer in a million correct for 12 mSv (1200 mrem) radiation exposure? My references state 0.05 per Sv for average age. So I get a risk of 1 in 1667. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.39.164.26 (talk) 22:04, 2 February 2009 (UTC) [edit] Electron beamI don't know why electron-beam CT is given a whole photograph. These scanners are very rare and one could easily remove all reference to it. Otherwise, why not talk about all the other forms of CT? The term "CAT" has not been used by professionals for 20 years: it is called "CT"
The eSpeed system represents the fastest temporal resolution offered in a CT scanner. http://www.gehealthcare.com/usen/ct/products/espeed.html The fastest speed is 33ms not the 50ms reported in this article. [edit] body section roentgenographyBe careful with this term. There is a very old film-based (non-digital) method for making tomographic images and the term "body section roentgenography" may refer to this. [edit] dose decrease?"overall radiation dose has decreased" Actually, I believe the overall dose has increased. This is a result of using very thin slices on the multislice (volume) CT scanners. Advances in technology have meant that reproducing the image quality seen in scans acquired three or four years ago is now possible with significantly less dose. Unfortunately, the trend is to use these imporvements to full effect often increasing the dose. It is possible to achieve an adequate scan with a much reduced dose or a exquisite scan with a greatly increased dose. Whether doses increase or decrease will depend on the attitude of the referring radiologist most likely --5pints People, sign yourself. Three or four tildes ~~~~. Thanks very much. --Eleassar777 18:02, 31 May 2005 (UTC) [edit] Requested move
This article has been renamed as the result of a move request. violet/riga (t) 20:30, 6 Jun 2005 (UTC) [edit] DiscussionThe terms are not identical. There are plenty of uses of "computed tomography" in geology and materials science which are not axial. This article appears to be solely discussing the axially oriented medical technology, and I don't see any reason to block the more general term, which could at some future date develop into a general article on computed tomographic techniques. Dragons flight 21:16, May 31, 2005 (UTC)
In the event of moving it, at least, preserve the current page as a redirect. Else, it'll break the interwiki links, for example the one from our Tamil wiki. -- Sundar (talk · contribs) 06:23, Jun 1, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] References to real companies: when is it an ad?I am new to Wikipedia, and yesterday I had my first go. I don't like ads myself, but yesterday I added a few lines about microtomography and even nanotomography and I thought that it would be interesting to add a link to my company Skyscan, since I also found out that there was a link to "Creative Technology Ltd." on that same page. Also searching for Dell and IBM I found references to machines they sell, so I am wondering why that Skyscan link was removed? (I am just wondering, no hard feelings) I understand the intention of this Wikipedia to be free of ads, and to be accurate as possible but at Skyscan we are not a pure commercial company, we also help in a lot of research, especially bone research. We work together with universities. A lot of papers have been published by our people and we do develop very interesting new technology like our nano-ct scanner that has a pixel resolution about 150...250 nanometers. And our scanners are not exactly a mass product. I also see that some companies have here a complete description about when they were started up, who is in charge… is that not an ad? Again, I have no hard feelings that the link was removed, but I wanted to extend the microtomography and nanotomography since I did not find any references in here. And writing about is very hard to do if I cannot reference to my company or avoid the name Skyscan. PS: I am not a sales person, just IT. ;-) But we do create wonderful stuff here that is very interesting for scientific minded people. I just want to share that information. Any tips and hints are welcome. :-)
[edit] Proton CTWhat about Proton CT? Why is there no information on this? It could be a seperate page, but this page acts like the only CT is photon. I perform research in proton CT and could provide some text, if I got suggestions on where to put it. This page, or link to seperate page?
It seems like it might be very useful to split diagnostic CT from theraphy based CT. pCT is used to deliver a radition dose for theraphy vs for imaging. pCT, IMRT and other forms of Tomotheraphy theraphy should be discussed. Seems like pCT woud be best in theRadiation theraphysection.ZiggyGT 03:17, 25 May 2007 (UTC) [edit] Is this information really correct?I actually do CT scans and I am concerned that the info in this article is way off. We take 2 dimensional images of internal organs and we can reconstruct them into 3D images with special software (that not every CT scanner is connected to). Also, the "axial" is not included in the name very often because the data is actually collected in a spiral or helical plane and then made "axial" by the computer. 16:49, 9 March 2006 (UTC) Christopher B. RT(R)(CT pending) http://upload.wikimedia.org/skins/common/images/button_link.pngCT is 3 Dimentional. The CT image uses what's called "voxels" (a volume of pixels). The "matrix" is what the technologist views. The matrix is composed of all the voxels the the scanner sees, and reconstructs into the image on the screen. Yes, we can use the information to make a true 3D image, but even though the technologist sees a 2D image, the scanner is aquiring the information 3D. For example, say I take a slice with a thickness of 5mm. The voxel will be 5mm deep, even though I'm looking at a flat screen or image. Especially now with Multi-Detector Scanners, we can reconstruct that 5mm image into whatever thickness we want. For simplicity, if I cut the 5mm voxel in half, I'll get two 2.5mm images. There are 3 planes used in Radiology (Axial, Sagital, Coronal). The scanners still aquire the images in the axial plane. With helical/spiral (similar terms, different brand -- Siemens: Helical GE: Spiral)scanning, rather than the sequential step by step style of imaging, the scanner will continuously scan and image the patient while moving the patient through the scanner.
Dimensional data is no more regular in MRI than CT. The actual axial data is not viewed but an axial, sagital or coronal construct or even a multi-planar construction is available. 4.230.114.16 (talk) 03:32, 3 December 2008 (UTC) 20 June 2007 [edit] ==The term axial should be dropped. Only older radiologists/radiographers use it now. People prefer the term "transverse" as it refers to the patients anatomy. eg. With a multi-slice CT its common for the patient to be slightly crooked in the scanner, but the radiographer produces "transverse" images through their head. These don't necessarily correspond to the axis of the scanner. Also the two other planes routinely presented to clinicians are "sagital" and "coronal", "transverse" is the anatomical term for the 3rd plane. [edit] misleadingI'd like to kindly point out the term CT does not necessarily mean an imaging technique strictly in the *medical* field. It's a broadly used technique spanning many fields. To show and talk about only the instruments of this technique used in *one* aspect of the medical field misleads the audience into thinking that this is a very narrow topic. Such is not the case. Please consider revamping this topic. Perhaps the main CT page could discuss the mathematics and history, then sub-topics could be broken out; astronomy, oceanography, reconnaissance, microscopy, as seen in the current page, etc... I do realise that this subject has been rapidly expanding in several fields for years now and the terminology is a mess. It won't be cleaned up anytime soon, so why worry about it. Gatohaus 01:29, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] =A disambiguation page is a really good idea. The term "CT" refers to a number of things 1) a CT scanner - ie the medical device 2) CT image processing routines. These are also used in ultra-sound machines. eg. fanbeam vs cone beam. 3) pCT - proton CT therapy.
[edit] History of CTThe history of transmission CT, both for medical as well as non-medical applications, goes much farther back than currently mentioned in the article. First, medical X-ray tomography (known as 'Conventional Tomography' or 'Classical Tomography') was used for many years prior to the advent of CT (apparently since the 1920's), with the principle of mechanically moving the film and/or X-ray tube during a prolonged exposure in such a way as to blur out all object voxels except the ones lying in a pre-defined focal plane. This was used quite extensively at the time, for example to detect brain pathology in conjuction with the injection of air into the ventricular system (obviously a very traumatic procedure), called pneumoencephalography. In 1942, Gabriel Frank was issued US patent 02281931 for a CT-like X-ray scanning apparatus that performed reconstruction from projections using analog techniques. It is not clear whether the disclosed device was ever built or used. In 1961, Malvin Howard Kalos, a professor of physics at Columbia University in NY, invented a technique for scanning vapor pipes with gamma radiation in nuclear reactors to determine their consistency. This was the first known application of the principle of computerized tomography and was part of work funded by the US Atomic Energy Commission (see: "Conceptual Design of a Vapor Volume Fraction Instrument", Kalos, AEC Contract AT(30-1)-2303(IX), Apr. 1961. ) Apparently Prof. Kalos did recognize the potential of this technique for medical applications, and reportedly went over to the nearby Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center to try to talk the radiologists there into possibly using his invention to replace the traumatic pneumoencephalography procedure for their patients. The story goes that he was laughed out of the building and lost his interest in pursuing this further. In the mid 1960's Allan Cormack came up with his independent concept for CT, and by the late 1960's Godfrey Hounsfield invented and developed his version. Apparently all these individuals, as well as others in various parts of the world, were unaware of each other at that point (WWW and Google being some years away ;) ). Hounsfield's main advantage was that he actually put his invention to practical use wheras the others just had the concept. By the way, Hounsfield used an iterative computational method to reconstruct an image from projections, whereas Kalos and the others used direct analytical techniques, the latter also being used today. Anybody that knows more about this subject is welcome to add. I suggest a section about this be added to the main History section. tomos1 --I recall reading about the initial development of the mathematics of tomography... It came out of research on brain function (ie the role of different areas) done using medical records from a Japanese/Russian war about 1900(?) One side used a particularly small bullet which, in more cases than with other bullets, would transit the skull without causing death. By analyzing military medical records of many such unfortunate (or fortunate?) soldiers and relating which mental functions were affected with the noted entry/exit points, a map of brain function was developed. The suggestion was that the math developed to do this was a precursor to the programs used now in CT scans. This would make an interesting addition to the history section if someone can find the actual reference and check my memory on this. 24.69.20.94 05:38, 27 September 2007 (UTC)Steve Allen
[edit] Example imagesMany of the example CT images included (and linked to) are poorly windowed (brightness and contrast both too low) - as a result very little detail is visible. This applies to both the chest and cranial images on the main page and a linked example [[3]]. In the case of the linked site, the window settings aren't even consistent between neighboring images in the series. It would be nice to have appropriately windowed examples, to illustrate the anatomic detail available with CT. Could we perhaps ask the owner of the original data to prepare new images from the raw data, or perhaps another contributor could provide some new images. Unfortunately, simply adjusting the web-ready images would be unsatisfactory as much of the contrast detail will have been discarded in the conversion to 8-bit images. ChumpusRex 17:54, 10 May 2006 (UTC) If it is any help I posted a slice from an Abdominal and pelvic CT I had last year prior to surgery. Feel free to include it in this article if you think it fits. I also uploaded a video of all the slides (better idea of whats going on to YouTube though I am not sure if Wikimedia supports video files CT Scan of Abdominal & Pelvic region on Crohn's patient prior to surgery. --Jsaveker 17:56, 10 July 2007 (UTC) [edit] CT imaging as graphic artI removed this section because I saw no supporting sources for it. If someone does have the correct secondary sources for it then it could be included. Thanks, Crum375 00:07, 18 June 2006 (UTC) [edit] Removing my beautiful art / the author's responseI wrote that section. What is wrong with it? Please explain. I accept your removing the section and the image if your have any objection against their quality. Please let me know if this is the case. Then I will shut my mouth up. However, I do not accept this removal if your only reason is the lack of references. How can I provide you with any source if I was the original creator of the text and the image. And one more word: I do not have time to read through the elaborated rules about secondary and other kinds of references. My image is simply an original piece of art that I donated to the World. If you do not like it then let me know. PLEASE.Otherwise I will act like an idiot and you will suggest to excomunicate me. I am from the seventeenth sentury so I rather choose excommunication than learning the stupid IP rights when I am the owner. Please respond!!!! excommunicandus Zgyorfi, please read the relevant WP policies that pertain to sourcing, such as WP:RS. I will try to touch some key issues here, but you really should do your own detailed reading. First, let me say that the fact that you are eager to help and improve WP is greatly appreciated by all of us, so please don't be discouraged by anything I am about to say. But to contribute in a productive and useful way you have to understand what WP is about. Again, please read the various policies, e.g. WP:NOT, WP:OR and many more. I'll mention one classical NOT - WP is not a place where artists may arbitrarily upload original work. If you have created a beautiful masterpiece, you can't just upload it to WP regardless of the purity of your altruistic intentions. WP is an encyclopedia - that means it is essentially a summary of notable work that has been published and thereby became notable elsewhere. Such a publication (e.g. an art book reviewed and published by a reputable publisher - not self publishing), when verifiable and reliable would be considered a secondary source, while the work or art (say) itself is considered a primary source. WP itself would then become a tertiary source when citing this secondary source art book. In this specific case of CT related art, you would have to cite a publisher that actually published this work and made it notable. Please feel free to ask me (or anyone else) any question, but I really encourage you to read on your own and become an expert on the subject of what WP is and what it is not. Thanks again, (and please sign all your messages with 4 tildes - it makes life easier for everyone) Crum375 00:22, 19 June 2006 (UTC) [edit] Commerical Sites in External LinksI just removed a few barnacles. Please do not add spam there - WP is an encyclopedia. If you have a site that is non-commercial (not selling anything and not favoring a company or group of companies) and adds important information to the article, it may belong there. Note that if the information is so important - it may belong directly in the text anyway. Otherwise, any spam or ads will be reverted. Crum375 13:31, 26 June 2006 (UTC) [edit] Power and voltageThe image in the "process" section claims that CT scanners use up to 150kW of power, while in the main article under "Further Advances" it is claimed that up to 150kV is needed, at a power of up to 100kW. These should be consistent. Perhaps the information in the image is incorrect, and needs to be changed to 100kW or "150kV at 100kW". I don't know the field, so I don't know if the maximum power is 100kW or 150kW. --Mike Van Emmerik 23:45, 20 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] No SourcesThere's no doubt that this a well-written article, and I don't dispute its accuracy, but there are still no sources, either after facts or in a section. Sloverlord 17:30, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] history section removed?An anonymous user removed the history section of this article on Nov 7th. Someone who knows more about this should take a look at the deleted material and determine if it should have been deleted or not. 64.81.115.243 03:08, 11 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Whole body scansMost visitors won't understand what the problem is with having to follow up on "incidental findings" of a whole body scan. This should be explained succinctly, but I don't know how. An example of a problem is as follows, as I understand it. A scan incidentally shows a small carcinoma somewhere. Conventional medical practice would not have discovered the tumor and there is no clinical experience with such a finding so it is not known whether such early, small, occult lesions are likely to grow or metastasize or whether they spontaneously disappear. Therefore there is no way to compare cost versus benefit of surgical intervention and all we have to go on is anxiety. On the public health level, many unproductive tests and procedures would be conducted out of fear, ignorance and excessive risk avoidance policies, diverting resources from where they be more beneficial. On the individual patient level, someone with enough money would feel compelled to spend it and someone without may impoverish themselves or worry themselves into considerable trouble. Clarification of when whole body scans are worthwhile awaits scientific research and perhaps should be discouraged for now unless there is a pretty good special reason for doing one. How can this be expressed neatly? Myron 11:25, 10 January 2007 (UTC) [edit] Digitally Reconstructed Radiograph (DRR)This reconstruction technique is used primarily in radiation planning. This is not used in diagnostic scanning where the reconstruction modes are Scout/Pilot/Tomogram and Axial or Helical. It may be useful to describe the imaging modes and the type of images. 2D and 3D visualization images are described in the next section. I added the sections on "Types of acquisition". I thought that this allowed the DRR to be integrated. I suggest that there be a brief descriptions of the modes and then a separate article on each mode. The Computed Tomography article jumps into the technology of the hardware so quickly I really think the person seeking information will be lost. some basic physics and the basic acquisition modes can help. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by ZiggyGT (talk • contribs). The suggestion to merge DRR into Computed Tomography is still present. I suggested the change, made the change when there appeared to be no oposition. The DRR merge suggestion remains.??? How I got the protocol right for this type of change.ZiggyGT —Preceding signed but undated comment was added at 03:42, 27 September 2007 (UTC) I disagree that they should be merged as DRR's are not solely a product of CT, they can also be produced from MRI. Issues remain about the visible bony anatomy of MRI DRR's but solutions have been proposed such as usinf=g software to create contours and assign a bulk density. Therefore DRR cannot be considered to be CT only. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.24.235.223 (talk) 16:27, 6 December 2007 (UTC) DRR is not CT - CT is a way of aquiring data. DRR use data to create a simulated radiograph. As has been said before you could use any data not just CT. My company creates software that can create DRR's from the visible human CT data - but we could use the MRI data or the TIFF image data. Another way of creating a DRR might be to use a CAD model of a skeleton (no voxel data of any sort would then be used, never mind CT Data). DRR's are also created in industrial radiography from CAD files. This page should never have been amalgamated with the CT page. Philipcosson (talk) 08:19, 4 April 2008 (UTC) How do we unmerge this section back to it's own page? [edit] See Also SectionI've noticed this article doesn't have a 'see also' section. Maybe this would be a good idea as anyone wanting to browse different types of CT scans etc could use this rather than looking through the article for a link, which is now pretty choc a bloc anyway. So for example, a link to Computed Tomography Angiography or other types of scans. Maybe someone would like to write and article about HRCT? Heather 09:25, 30 June 2007 (UTC)Glitzy_queen00 [edit] Confusion between 3D image reconstruction and 3D image visualizationI think the article is very misleading because it is confusing 3D image reconstruction with 3D image visualization (or rendering). The section entitled "Three dimensional (3D) Image Reconstruction" is actually dealing with visualization and rendering. To make things clear, image reconstruction is the process in which the raw projection data acquired from the scanner is converted (or reconstructed) into a 3D image (or matrix of voxels). Image reconstruction algorithms include the popular filter-backprojection, as well as iterative techniques such as ART or MLEM. CT scanners only acquire projection data, and it is necessary to apply a reconstruction algorithm to generate a 3D image. The 3D image can then in turn be viewed using a 2D or 3D rendering technique. When rendring is 2D, the technologist simply looks at a slice through the 3D voume. When rendering is 3D, various methods can be used (and these methods are covered by the article under section "Three dimensional (3D) Image Reconstruction"). I suggest to rename the current section "Three dimensional (3D) Image Visualization" and to create a new section entitled "Three dimensional (3D) Image Reconstruction". I recommend looking at Positron emission tomography and Tomographic reconstruction for more information on different image reconstruction methods. --Pratx 10:04, 26 July 2007 (UTC) I think you make a very good point. Take a look at this conference. Fully 3D conference The topics here are all about the generation of images not the manipulation of those images into another form (visualization. Then checkout the types of products here Kitware VisualizationI think the confusion comes from the fact that the modern multislice scanners create sets of thin images that are often never reviewed without the 3D and MPR visualization modes. Many people see these as raw data, thus they are reconstructed. I think these should be considered "raw images" I think that this is quite confused in the industry and that this should be clarified. ZiggyGT —The preceding signed but undated comment was added at 05:23, August 22, 2007 (UTC). [edit] Merge proposal?Somebody placed a "Merge" tag from X-ray tomography and Synchrotron X-ray tomographic microscopy. I oppose this. "Computed tomography" is a discrete technique widely used as a form of medical imaging. The methods used on inanimate objects are significantly different. Axl 10:08, 25 August 2007 (UTC) I agree. I think that the most common use is in medical imaging. I think that a related link at the end of the article would be good to tie these items together. But the should be separate linked items.ZiggyGT —Preceding signed but undated comment was added at 23:09, 17 September 2007 (UTC) This "Merge" is not necessary. These two articles should be tied and noted however they all have distinct differences, and although an amateur may not care, those of us within the profession note the differences, and thus others should be able to make an informed differentiation between the two.--Banjoanderson 06:34, 28 October 2007 (UTC) While "computed tomography" is used in multiple applications, there is a need to have pages that focus on specific applications (including, of course, medical applications). Within a specific discipline (say medicine or palaeontology) it is sometimes assumed that "computed tomography" is specific to their domain, when it is not. There are many related pages that speak to the various applications of "computed tomography" and I would respectfully suggest that a general page (maybe this one) is edited to introduce these different applications near the head of the page, then continue with a general treatment of the fundamental systems and technologies "computed tomography" ... whether axial or not, etc.. Enquire (talk) 21:59, 19 December 2007 (UTC) [edit] Two Different ProcessesCT and 'Synchrotron X-ray tomographic microscopy' are two different processes. Computed Tomography is a medical diagnostic for all sorts of medical conditions, whereas SXT is a process to study inanimate objects for non-medical research. Simmjb 00:45, 24 September 2007 (UTC) [edit] Exposure to foetusDoes anybody have an idea what is the Impact of exposure of CT scans on foetus (2-3 months old)?? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 57.72.66.20 (talk) 13:14, 16 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] Missing technologiesShould there be mention of 4D CT and CBCT? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.231.89.235 (talk) 04:46, 28 October 2007 (UTC) No unfortunately there are only 3 known dimensions. 4.230.114.16 (talk) 03:49, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
[edit] OverexposureReview in NEJM about excessive CT scanning. JFW | T@lk 01:40, 29 November 2007 (UTC) [edit] Weeding the external linksHere's the (old) list of external links. I have removed all of the indented entries. I've been particularly hard on the ones that require registration or are otherwise of a promotional nature. One or two might be worthwhile as references to the article text. A too-specific topic (cone-beam CT and dental implants) was also axed. Further pruning could probably take place. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 19:47, 30 December 2007 (UTC)
211.29.169.227 (talk) 01:21, 17 October 2008 (UTC) I want to use this above link in a project I'm doing about CT. Can I get more information about this book so I can reference it? thanks 211.29.169.227 (talk) 01:21, 17 October 2008 (UTC) [edit] VCT 'Volumetric Computed Tomography'I recently got a VCT scan and was surprised the info was not on here. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/9725.php Stepshep (talk) 01:31, 12 February 2008 (UTC) [edit] Possible error on Tufts UniversityThe article says: "Allan McLeod Cormack of Tufts University in Massachusetts independently invented a similar process" but according to this source: South African Inventions - http://www.southafrica.info/business/trends/innovations/inventions.htm "The computed axial tomography scan, or CAT scan, was developed at Tufts University in the UK by South African physicist Allan Cormack and Godfrey Hounsfield of EMI Laboratories" So is it in UK or in Massachusettss? Rfwoolf (talk) 13:00, 11 July 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Cat Scan
[edit] Grammar in: Types of modern CT acquisition[Grammatical addition needed:] "Types of modern CT acquisition Dynamic volume CT During the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) [insert here, as appropiate: "conference," "meeting," "symposium," etc.] in 2007, Toshiba Medical Systems introduced [...]"
[edit] sinogram?an edit was recently made to sinogram (a disambiguation page) such that one of its definitions now points to this article. However, this article does not mention the term. Could someone who is knowledgeable in this area please integrate mention the concept into this article, or change the disambiguation page to point to a more appropriate target? Thanks. Agradman (talk) 18:23, 15 June 2009 (UTC) added details: Originally, the page only included Radon Transform and Chinese Character (history). Subsequently, someone added tomographic reconstruction (history). Subsequently, someone joined radon transform & tomographic reconstruction with the phrase, "or equivently" (history). This led me to view the concepts as identical, so I brought the page to this version (history). My error was corrected to its current form (history)by Sławomir Biały, an editor who is knowledgeable about the radon transform. Agradman (talk) 18:40, 15 June 2009 (UTC) [edit] This article is fundamentally incorrectAccording to this article, a CT scanner is a medical device. This is not true, the medical CT scanner is only one of the many applications of this technology! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 193.191.9.29 (talk) 10:22, 13 November 2009 (UTC) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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