We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

MedImaging

Download Mobile App
Recent News Radiography MRI Ultrasound Nuclear Medicine General/Advanced Imaging Imaging IT Industry News

Ghost Tomography May Lead to Safer 3D Imaging

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 23 Jan 2019
An unconventional approach known as ghost imaging could revolutionize three-dimensional (3D) tomography screening for early warning signs of disease.

Developed at Australian National University (ANU; Canberra), Monash University (Melbourne, Australia), and The European Synchrotron (Grenoble, France), ghost tomography (GT) uses random x-ray intensity patterns to illuminate an object from various angles, with each beam split in two. The pattern is recorded in the primary beam, which acts as a reference since it does not penetrate the object; the secondary beam passes through the object, with X-ray transmission recorded by a single-pixel detector.

Image: A three-dimensional reconstructed image using ghost tomography (Photo courtesy of ANU).
Image: A three-dimensional reconstructed image using ghost tomography (Photo courtesy of ANU).

A computer then creates a two-dimensional (2D) X-ray projection image from the recording. The process is then repeated at different orientations so as to construct a full 3D image. For the proof-of-concept study, the researchers imaged a 3D ghost image of a simple object (5.6mm in diameter) at a relatively low resolution of about 0.1mm. According to the researchers, the resulting 3D image can display the interior of objects that are opaque to visible light. The study was published in the December 2018 issue of Optica.

“The beauty of using the ghost imaging technique for 3D imaging is that most of the X-ray dose is not even directed towards the object you want to capture; that's the ghostly nature of what we're doing,” said lead author Andrew Kingston, PhD, of the ANU School of Physics and Engineering. “There's great potential to significantly lower doses of X-rays in medical imaging with 3D ghost imaging and to really improve early detection of diseases like breast cancer.”

“3D X-ray ghost imaging, or ghost tomography, is a completely new field, so there's an opportunity for the scientific community and industry to work together to explore and develop this exciting innovation,” concluded Dr. Kingston. “A variation of our approach doesn't require an X-ray camera at all, just a sensor - this would make a 3D medical imaging setup much cheaper.”

Related Links:
Australian National University
Monash University
The European Synchrotron


Gold Member
Ultrasound System
FUTUS LE
Gold Member
Electrode Solution and Skin Prep
Signaspray
3D Mammography Software
ProFound AI
Body Array Coil
12-Channel Body Array Coil 1.5 / 3.0 T

Latest General/Advanced Imaging News

New AI Method Captures Uncertainty in Medical Images
23 Jan 2019  |   General/Advanced Imaging

CT Coronary Angiography Reduces Need for Invasive Tests to Diagnose Coronary Artery Disease
23 Jan 2019  |   General/Advanced Imaging

Novel Blood Test Could Reduce Need for PET Imaging of Patients with Alzheimer’s
23 Jan 2019  |   General/Advanced Imaging