Abstract:
The image of an object is improved by estimating the scattered radiation that it transmits to the detectors. To achieve this, one uses the scattered radiation effectively measured through an imitation of the object, having analogous attenuation properties, and which one modifies by the weighting coefficients obtained by a transformation of the values of the total radiation received through the object ( 3 ) and the selected imitation ( 8 ). One thus manages to improve the image without subjecting the object to a double irradiation in order to measure the scattered radiation separately. The principal applications are tomography, bone densitometry and non-destructive controls.

Description:
DESCRIPTION  
       [0001]     This invention concerns a method for estimating a scattered radiation, for which the main envisaged application is the correction of tomography or bone densitometry measurements.  
         [0002]     The use of an irradiation radiation has the disadvantage of producing significant scattered radiation through the examined object, especially in the very frequent event of a diverging radiation (conical or fan shaped). In other words, each of the detectors situated behind the object receive not only a primary radiation, arising directly from the source by a rectilinear path and having crossed through a well defined region of the object, but also a scattered radiation from an indeterminate source which affects the measurement and which it would therefore be desirable to correct.  
         [0003]     Several methods are already used. It is in this way that the primary radiation can be measured alone if a rigorous collimation of the detectors and the source is made in order to intercept the scattered radiation, but in practice said method requires a scanning of the beam, which takes time to accomplish, and during which one has to put up with movements of the patient, if one is examining living organisms.  
         [0004]     The opposite idea of only measuring the scattered radiation has also been proposed. To do this, one arranges a discontinuous network of absorbers, such as lead balls, between the object and the detectors, in order to locally stop the primary radiation, in such a way that the detectors located behind said absorbers only measure the scattered radiation. This process, called the “beam stop” process, therefore gives two dimensional tables or bundles of the value of scattered radiation, which one completes by interpolation between the detectors located behind the absorbers. The scattered radiation estimated in this manner is subtracted from the total radiation measured separately. This process is precise but has the disadvantage that it imposes two irradiations of the object and thus the object receives double the dose of radiation. A final example of a method for correcting the scattered radiation by material means comprises the use of anti-scattering grids, but they are only partially efficient; it is insufficient for a conical beam, where the scattered radiation may be several times greater than the primary radiation.  
         [0005]     Finally, a certain number of digital methods exist for estimating the scattered radiation, from convolutions and deconvolutions of measurements, for example: one could aslo cite French patent 2 759 800 for a different, analytical digital method. Said methods are, in general, difficult to employ since they depend on parameters chosen by the user (convolution kernel, for example) that only give good results in favourable situations, such as small areas where the scattered radiation is low, or objects with a relatively homogeneous content. No simple method exists that makes it possible, for example, to correct the scattered radiation through the thorax or other major anatomical regions, which are frequently examined but which are unfavourable for correcting the scattered radiation due to their very volume and the heterogeneity due to the presence of a complex bone structure and in which the radiation attenuation capacity is very different to that of soft tissue.  
         [0006]     Finally, we should mention American U.S. Pat. No. 6,018,565 which describes a mixed method, using “beam stop” and convolution.  
         [0007]     An essential aim of the invention is to propose a method for estimating and correcting scattered radiation that could be suited to difficult situations of non-destructive control of inert or animate objects, or all image reconstruction methods.  
         [0008]     The method according to the invention is, in its most general form, an object imaging method by multiple acquisition, comprising an estimation of a scattered radiation from an initial radiation that has passed through an object while undergoing an attenuation that allows a total measurement radiation to pass through, characterised by: 
        for at least one acquisition, taking a table of measurements of a scattered radiation, obtained by passing the initial radiation through an imitation of the object,     and for each of the acquisitions, calculating transposition coefficients between the imitation and the object, from the initial radiation, the total measurement radiation through the object and a total measurement radiation through the imitation.     and weighting of the table of measurements with the transposition coefficients.        
 
         [0012]     Advantageously, the imitation will be a block of constant thickness and in a homogeneous material, with an attenuation similar to a base material of the object; in general, the taking of a table of measurements will be a selection in a series of tables of measurements of scattered radiation, obtained beforehand by successively passing the initial radiation through a respective series of imitations of the object, of different but constant thicknesses; and the selection will be made by comparing a value of the total measurement radiation through the object and a value of the total measurement radiation through the imitations.  
         [0013]     The weighting coefficients are generally ratios of values of a same functional calculated for the object and for the imitation. The functional used may be equal to the product of the total measurement radiation times the logarithm of the ratio of the total measurement radiation and the initial radiation. 
     
    
       [0014]     The invention will now be described in referring to the figures, in which:  
         [0015]      FIG. 1  is a general view of an acquisition of measurements;  
         [0016]      FIG. 2  is a view of a calibration acquisition;  
         [0017]     and  FIG. 3  illustrates the steps of the method. 
     
    
       [0018]     We will first refer to  FIG. 1 , where an X-ray tube  1  emits a conical beam  2  towards an object  3  to be examined (here a patient stretched out on a table  4 ) then, through him, towards a flat network  5  of detectors  6  arranged in a matrix. The detectors  6  are connected to an acquisition device  7  and measure a scattered radiation that is superimposed on the primary radiation, only suitable for the examination or the control of the object.  
         [0019]     The estimation of the scattered radiation through the patient (object  3 ) consists firstly in obtaining two dimensional tables or bundles of scattered radiation obtained under comparable circumstances. To achieve this, one carries out calibration radiations through imitations  8  of the object  3  to be examined, in accordance with  FIG. 2 : the irradiation conditions remain the same, in other words one continues to use the tube  1 , the beam  2 , the network  5  of detectors  6  and the acquisition device  7 , the imitation  8  however replacing the patient; we have also added a grid  9  of lead balls  10  between the imitation  8  and the network  5 . It ensues from this arrangement that the rays  11  going through the balls  10  are completely absorbed and the regions  12  of the network  5  located in the same line as said rays  11  have detectors  6  that only measure the scattered radiation at these places. One only has to record these measured values and interpolate between the regions  12  in order to suitably estimate the scattered radiation from the imitation  8  for all of the detectors  6  of the network  5 .  
         [0020]     The imitation  8  should be similar to the object in order that the radiation scattered by them are identical. A perfect similarity is not possible, and for this reason one makes do with an imitation  8  resembling the object  3  and for which the associated bundle of scattered radiation will be corrected later in order to evaluate that of the object. In practice, the imitation  8  may be a block of a homogeneous material and which has the same attenuation coefficient as the base material of the object  3 : in the case of a human body, essentially composed of soft tissue, it is known that Plexiglas (polymethacrylate) is suitable.  
         [0021]     In order to allow varied measurements, in reality one will use several bundles of scattered radiation, obtained for as many imitations  8 , which will only differ by their thickness and therefore by the length of the path covered by the rays  11 . Said bundles are recorded in a data base before the useful measurements on the objects  3 , in order to take a bundle of scattered radiation comparable to that of an object  3 , one will select in practice one of the bundles of the data base or, even better, a bundle that has been obtained by interpolation calculations between two of said bundles. The selection criterion could be defined by means of a specific ray  13  ending up in a region  14  of the network  5  and which will not pass through either the absorbers  10  of  FIG. 2 , or through the bone tissues of the patient (or more generally portions of the object  3  in which the absorption properties are different to the material of the imitation  8 ) in  FIG. 1 . The total radiation, primary and scattered, received by the region  14  after having crossed each imitation  8  will act as index to the corresponding scattered radiation table, and the selected table will have the index at an identical value to the total radiation measured at region  14  through the object  3 . This all corresponds to going from the state E 1  to the state E 2  in the block diagram of  FIG. 3 , that we will now begin to explain.  
         [0022]     The continuation of the method essentially consists in the correction of the table of scattered radiation thus selected to adjust it as best as possible to the bundle of radiation actually scattered by the object  3 . To achieve this, one uses all of the information available, in other words the total radiation received by the detectors  6  beyond the object  3  as the selected imitation  8 . Said total radiation is designated Φt, the scattered radiation Φd, the initial radiation from the tube Φo and the primary radiation Φ, the relation Φt=Φ+φd is met.  
         [0023]     One is then in states E 3  and E 4  of the block diagram of  FIG. 3 . Then, one transforms the total radiation values Φt measured for the object  3  and the selected imitation  8  by applying the functionals to them. More precisely, it is know in the art that Φd is proportional to Φlog (Φ/Φo); this relation, which is called the Klein and Nishina law, gives a general appearance of the scattered radiation, for lack of its intensity.  
         [0024]     The initial radiation Φo is known; the primary radiation Φ is not known, but one agrees to apply this relation in an approximate manner by replacing it by the total radiation Φt, in other words the functional employed associates each measured value of the total radiation Φt with the calculated value Φt log (Φt/Φo), assumed to be close to the scattered radiation Φd at this location; we have reached states E 5  and E 6  in the block diagram.  
         [0025]     The following step consists in carrying out, for each of the detectors  6 , the ratio of values given by the functional for the object  3  and the imitation  8  selected according to the formula K=Φt log(Φt/Φo) object/Φt log(Φt/Φo) imitation. The weighting coefficients K thus obtained will serve to deform the bundle of selected scattered radiation in state E 2  in order to estimate that of the object  3 . The results again constitute a two dimensional table or a matrix having identical dimensions to that of the radiation tables since it is associated with the network  5  of detectors  6 . It is therefore possible and advantageous to carry out a spatial digital filtering of this matrix by applying a low pass filter that corrects the coefficients K while only conserving the lowest frequencies of their variation and thus making them probably closer to reality since the scattered radiation varies quite slowly from one point to another.  
         [0026]     When the table of definitive weighting coefficients, designated K′, has been obtained (in state E 7 ), it serves to weight the selected table of scattered radiation before state E 2 , in order to obtain a table of radiation scattered by the object  3  (state E 8 , which constitutes the sought after estimation); the formula applied is Φd object=K′Φd object. These estimated object values Φd may then be subtracted from the total radiation Φt measured by the detectors  6  to estimate the primary radiation Φ and obtain a more precise radiographic image of the object  3 .  
         [0027]     This method applies to simple or multiple energy radiations; in the latter case, it is repeated separately for each of the energies used.  
         [0028]     The functional proposed here is not the only one that may be used, and the simpler functional Φd=kΦ (here approaching closer in Φd=kΦt), where k is a constant, could thus give good results for estimating Φd.  
         [0029]     As has been stated, this method is particularly interesting in tomography or bone densitometry, where an in-depth image of the object is reconstructed from a multitude of acquisitions (irradiations) taken around the object by a mobile network of detectors, then by a digital combination of said acquisitions (carried out using techniques that are not covered by the invention). One of the limitations encountered in practice is the excessive dose received by the object; however, we have seen that the method according to the invention makes it possible to reduce the dose required compared to other methods, especially those that impose a double irradiation, to subtract the scattered radiation from the total radiation. It is felt that this advantage will be marked in linear network detector methods (or with superimposed lines in a two dimensional network where one obtains one or several cross-sections (two dimensional images) through the object.  
         [0030]     When several acquisitions k are undertaken, the operating method summarised by  FIG. 3  may be applied to each of them, an independent estimation of the scattered radiation being made each time. However, situations exist where the scattered radiation could be considered invariable, particularly for objects with rotational symmetry, very frequent in non-destructive control methods. Several of the steps of  FIG. 3  then become unnecessary: one could thus make do with the selection of a single imitation  8  for all of the acquisitions k; if necessary, only steps E 3 , E 5 , E 7  and E 8  involving the object need to be repeated for each acquisition. The choice of a simplification of the method by the omission of certain calibrations could be at the discretion of the operator.