Computed tomography: beam hardening and environmental density artifact.
- 1 July 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) in Radiology
- Vol. 148 (1), 279-283
- https://doi.org/10.1148/radiology.148.1.6856849
Abstract
Phantoms designed to simulate cysts or avascular masses and other material encountered in computed tomographic (CT) body and head scanning were used to evaluate the effect of beam hardening in a GE CT/T 8800 scanner. The phantoms were scanned before and after the addition of iodinated contrast material to various compartments within the phantoms. Apparently, in general the addition of contrast material in the CT body phantom resulted in a decrease in the CT numbers recorded from the cyst phantoms. Conversely, the addition of contrast material in a concentric peripheral cylinder (simulating the addition or presence of the calvarium in CT head scanning) resulted in a generalized inhomogeneous increase in CT numbers of specimen materials contained in that ring.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The environmental density artifact: a beam-hardening effect in computed tomography.Radiology, 1981
- A strategy for the contrast enhancement of malignant tumors using dynamic computed tomography and intravascular pharmacokinetics.Radiology, 1980
- An Inaccuracy in Computed Tomography: The Energy Dependence of CT ValuesRadiology, 1977
- Analysis of the Dense Lesion at Computed Tomography with Dual kVp ScansRadiology, 1977