COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY(CT)

 

CT SCANNER

 

 

Computed tomography scanning is a means by which the inside of the body can be imaged using a rotating x-ray machine which takes images from different angles around the body on a detector and by using powerful computer processing enables the production of images from the acquired data for diagnostic purposes. It is often considered as important a discovery as that of X-rays by Rontgen in that CT has revolutionised current medical practice worldwide. 

Allan Cormack  a South African physicist and Godfrey Hounsfield a British engineer are credited with this discovery with Hounsfield developing the scanner at EMI and producing the first clinical images of an axial section of the brain of a patient with Dr Ambrose a consultant neuroradiologist at Atkinson Morley Hospital in London in 1971. 

Hounsfield and Cormack were to share the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine in 1979 for their part in the discovery. In the mid 70s the CT scanner began to be used to image the body in cross-section.

Kalender in the late 1980s made advances with the technique by discovering  spiral volumetric CT scanning which would enable the CT scans to be done faster and would enable 3-D images to be obtained.

 

 

REFERENCES 

B THOMAS AMK  BANERJEE AK BUSCH U Classic Papers in Modern Diagnostic Radiology  Springer Verlag, Berlin, NY.  2005    ISBN 3540219277

B THOMAS A M K   BANERJEE  AK  The  History of Radiology OUP May 2013 

CT (Computed Tomography) Scans - A Level Physics,  Dr PhysicsA

A basic description of the mechanism of CT (computed tomography) scans for medical use in remote sensing. Part of the A Level Physics revision series.

W CT Scan https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CT_scan


W A detailed account of the evolution of the CT scanner

W CT@50 a collection of papers and videos

IMAGES

GE LightSpeed CT scanner at Open House, Monroeville, Pennsylvania

CC, daveynin

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