Modeling the performance of a photon counting x-ray detector for CT: Energy response and pulse pileup effects

被引:140
作者
Taguchi, Katsuyuki [1 ]
Zhang, Mengxi [1 ]
Frey, Eric C. [1 ]
Wang, Xiaolan [1 ]
Iwanczyk, Jan S. [2 ]
Nygard, Einar [3 ]
Hartsough, Neal E. [2 ]
Tsui, Benjamin M. W. [1 ]
Barber, William C. [2 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Div Med Imaging Phys, Russell H Morgan Dept Radiol & Radiol Sci, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
[2] DxRay Inc, Northridge, CA 91324 USA
[3] Interon AS, N-1395 Hvalstad, Norway
关键词
computed tomography; photon counting; pulse pileup; SPECTRAL DISTORTION; COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY; HEIGHT SPECTRA;
D O I
10.1118/1.3539602
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Purpose: Recently, photon counting x-ray detectors (PCXDs) with energy discrimination capabilities have been developed for potential use in clinical computed tomography (CT) scanners. These PCXDs have great potential to improve the quality of CT images due to the absence of electronic noise and weights applied to the counts and the additional spectral information. With high count rates encountered in clinical CT, however, coincident photons are recorded as one event with a higher or lower energy due to the finite speed of the PCXD. This phenomenon is called a "pulse pileup event" and results in both a loss of counts (called "deadtime losses") and distortion of the recorded energy spectrum. Even though the performance of PCXDs is being improved, it is essential to develop algorithmic methods based on accurate models of the properties of detectors to compensate for these effects. To date, only one PCXD (model DXMCT-1, DxRay, Inc., Northridge, CA) has been used for clinical CT studies. The aim of that study was to evaluate the agreement between data measured by DXMCT-1 and those predicted by analytical models for the energy response, the deadtime losses, and the distorted recorded spectrum caused by pulse pileup effects. Methods: An energy calibration was performed using Tc-99m (140 keV), Co-57 (122 keV), and an x-ray beam obtained with four x-ray tube voltages (35, 50, 65, and 80 kVp). The DXMCT-1 was placed 150 mm from the x-ray focal spot; the count rates and the spectra were recorded at various tube current values from 10 to 500 mu A for a tube voltage of 80 kVp. Using these measurements, for each pulse height comparator we estimated three parameters describing the photon energy-pulse height curve, the detector deadtime tau, a coefficient k that relates the x-ray tube current I to an incident count rate a by a=k x I, and the incident spectrum. The mean pulse shape of all comparators was acquired in a separate study and was used in the model to estimate the distorted recorded spectrum. The agreement between data measured by the DXMCT-1 and those predicted by the models was quantified by the coefficient of variation (COV), i.e., the root mean square difference divided by the mean of the measurement. Results: Photon energy versus pulse height curves calculated with an analytical model and those measured using the DXMCT-1 were in agreement within 0.2% in terms of the COV. The COV between the output count rates measured and those predicted by analytical models was 2.5% for deadtime losses of up to 60%. The COVs between spectra measured and those predicted by the detector model were within 3.7%-7.2% with deadtime losses of 19%-46%. Conclusions: It has been demonstrated that the performance of the DXMCT-1 agreed exceptionally well with the analytical models regarding the energy response, the count rate, and the recorded spectrum with pulse pileup effects. These models will be useful in developing methods to compensate for these effects in PCXD-based clinical CT systems. (C) 2011 American Association of Physicists in Medicine. [DOI: 10.1118/1.3539602]
引用
收藏
页码:1089 / 1102
页数:14
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]   ENERGY-SELECTIVE RECONSTRUCTIONS IN X-RAY COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY [J].
ALVAREZ, RE ;
MACOVSKI, A .
PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 1976, 21 (05) :733-744
[2]   The medipix3 prototype, a pixel readout chip working in single photon counting mode with improved spectrometric performance [J].
Ballabriga, R. ;
Campbell, M. ;
Heijne, E. H. M. ;
Llopart, X. ;
Tlustos, L. .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE, 2007, 54 (05) :1824-1829
[3]  
BARBER WC, 2009, SPIE MED IMAGING 200, V7258
[4]   Accurate calculation of pileup effects in PIXE spectra from first principles [J].
Barradas, N. P. ;
Reis, M. A. .
X-RAY SPECTROMETRY, 2006, 35 (04) :232-237
[5]   Bio-medical X-ray imaging with spectroscopic pixel detectors [J].
Butler, A. P. H. ;
Anderson, N. G. ;
Tipples, R. ;
Cook, N. ;
Watts, R. ;
Meyer, J. ;
Bell, A. J. ;
Melzer, T. R. ;
Butler, P. H. .
NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION A-ACCELERATORS SPECTROMETERS DETECTORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT, 2008, 591 (01) :141-146
[6]   Multienergy Photon-counting K-edge Imaging: Potential for Improved Luminal Depiction in Vascular Imaging [J].
Feuerlein, Sebastian ;
Roessl, Ewald ;
Proksa, Roland ;
Martens, Gerhard ;
Klass, Oliver ;
Jeltsch, Martin ;
Rasche, Volker ;
Brambs, Hans-Juergen ;
Hoffmann, Martin H. K. ;
Schlomka, Jens-Peter .
RADIOLOGY, 2008, 249 (03) :1010-1016
[7]   Contrast agent recognition in small animal CT using the Medipix2 detector [J].
Firsching, Markus ;
Butler, Anthony P. ;
Scott, Nicola ;
Anderson, Nigel G. ;
Michel, Thilo ;
Anton, Gisela .
NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION A-ACCELERATORS SPECTROMETERS DETECTORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT, 2009, 607 (01) :179-182
[8]  
FREY EC, 2007, SPIE MED IMAGING 200, V6510
[9]   GENERALIZED METHOD FOR CORRECTING PULSE-HEIGHT SPECTRA FOR PEAK PILE-UP EFFECT DUE TO DOUBLE SUM PULSES .1. PREDICTING SPECTRAL DISTORTION FOR ARBITRARY PULSE SHAPES [J].
GARDNER, RP ;
WIELOPOLSKI, L .
NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS, 1977, 140 (02) :289-296
[10]   A MULTISEGMENT ANNULAR SI-DETECTOR SYSTEM FOR RBS ANALYSIS [J].
GUNZLER, R ;
SCHULE, V ;
SEELIGER, G ;
WEISER, M ;
BOHRINGER, K ;
KALBITZER, S ;
KEMMER, J .
NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS, 1988, 35 (3-4) :522-529