Interactive Transcript
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Isotropic imaging.
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It's key for coronary.
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So what exactly is it?
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The term basically means that the spatial
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resolution is the same in all three
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planes, three planes being X, Y, and Z.
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So spatial resolution is very important for coronary
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because coronary arteries tend to be very small.
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So we want to see the small diameter structures
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and be able to quantify the degree of stenosis.
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There are two types of spatial resolution.
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There's the in-plane.
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Which is the XY plane, which is the lower-lying
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fruit because all you have to do is increase
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the matrix size, narrow the field of view, and
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you can get very high spatial resolution.
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The more difficult part is getting a
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spatial resolution through the Z axis.
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So XY will create the pixel, Z will create
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the voxel, and that depends on detector width.
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Many of us now are used to CT scans with multiple
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detectors, with very thin, small detector sizes
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in detectors, but that wasn't always the case.
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And so as we approach isotropic
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imaging, because we're never quite there
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perfectly, it's really a
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testament to the progress of CT.
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To tell you how far we've gone,
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this is the first CT scan done.
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The first-generation scanner.
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CT of the head, which alongside the fact that it
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appears very grainy, took a long time to acquire.
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Parameters are 3x3x13mm.
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That's the in-plane spatial resolution is 3mm.
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Again, it wasn't very difficult to get
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3 millimeters in-plane, but through
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plane, slice thickness is 13 millimeters.
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Where are we today?
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Here's a curved MPR of the coronary artery, which,
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by the way, is something you can only do well.
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That is 3D manipulation and reformation
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because we have isotropic imaging.
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It's 0.4 by 0.4 by 0.5.
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46 00:02:10,835 --> 00:02:11,425
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So the degree of improvement
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is by 100, but not just that.
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It's the fact that we're able to deliver this with
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a reasonable radiation dose.
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One of the reasons why coronary CTA took off and
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coronary MR didn't is because of spatial resolution.
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Coronary MRA, actually the first papers for
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coronary MRA came before coronary CTA, but
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even now with the 3 Tesla, which is very much
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a powerful signal-to-noise magnet, you still
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struggle to get less than three millimeters.
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I mean, you can, but that might
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increase the scan time too much.
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MR, spatial resolution and scan time are related
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because to increase spatial resolution, you
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would need to increase the number of slices
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or partitions, as I said, and increase the
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phase matrix, increase the phase matrix.
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You increase the scan time.
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So you get a penalty.
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CT, spatial resolution and acquisition and
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temporalization are mostly unrelated, mostly.
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So this is what happens when
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you don't have isotropic voxels.
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You get what's known as a stair-step artifact,
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which is fine if you're looking at the femur.
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It's not so good if you're looking at the
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coronary artery where those stair steps
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themselves can be a source of confusion and
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artificially create stenosis when there isn't any.
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So to recap.
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Coronary arteries are tortuous.
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They don't travel along a single plane.
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They go in and out of plane.
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So in order to be able to see an
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artery, for example, at this point here and
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know exactly what the degree of stenosis
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is, you can't cut it axially, coronally, or sagittally.
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You have to go along the long axis
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of the artery and cut through it
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orthogonally.
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So it's a two-step thing, but you're only able to
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do that if it doesn't matter which plane you're in.
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So it doesn't matter if you're in
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axial, coronal, or off-axial plane.
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The fact that you have isotropic voxels
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means that there's no informational loss.
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And it's not just good having isotropic because you
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can have isotropic imaging with five millimeters
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by five millimeters by five millimeters.
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The point is you want to have isotropic
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and thin, not just isotropic, and both of
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which are necessary for coronary imaging.
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So how has the spatial resolution improved?
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And I think that this is a lecture in its own right.
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You can even write a book on it.
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Two things to appreciate.
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The first is that the detectors
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have become much more efficient.
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The power of the CT scan has increased.
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So we're delivering more iodine flux, but
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we're getting more out of that iodine flux.
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So we're not wasting radiation.
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So in a sense, things are more powerful,
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but also things are more efficient.
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So power and efficiency.
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Has resulted, along with multiple other things,
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in us being able to do isotropic imaging without
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hugely penalizing in terms of radiation dose.
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Thank you.
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