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Searchterm 'Display' found in 3 terms [
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Window Width
The window width is the range of CT numbers or MR numbers displayed on the image monitor of the CT scanner. The difference between the maximum and minimum of the range is displayed as gray levels.
Zooming
Zooming increases scale factors of images within a window. Zooming takes a selected region and extends it over the entire matrix of the displayed CT image. Usually, a zoom reconstruction increases the accuracy of the CT numbers by decreasing the overall size of the displayed image pixels, which decreases the possibility of many tissues occupying a single pixel (partial volume averaging).
Zooming or targeting is not the same as image magnification.

See also Banding.
Absorbed Dose
The absorbed dose is the average energy absorbed per unit mass.

The tissue absorbed energy in a small mass volume:
D = (dW/dm) [ Gy ]
D = absorbed dose in Gray (Gy); dW = in the tissue energy absorbed; DM = small volume of the mass.

The SI unit of absorbed dose is the joule per kilogram and its special name is the gray (Gy). In units often used by federal and state agencies, absorbed dose is given in rad; 1 rad = 0.01 Gy.

Absorbed dose is a feature that should increase dose awareness and help users in dose optimization. Absorbed dose in CT is quoted using the CTDI (computed tomography dose index)

CTDIvol (volume-averaged CT dose index) and the dose-length product (DLP) give an indication of the average absorbed dose and relative radiation risk to a standard patient. The user is being warned to scan parameter settings that may lead to high doses, and can adjust the protocol if appropriate. It should be noted that CTDIvol and DLP do not take patient size into account, and will give overestimates and underestimates for large and small patients, respectively.
Bit Range
Each pixel in a digital image has a bit range, which informs the computer which color (or shade of gray) the pixel will display.
CT Number
(Computed tomography number) The CT number is a selectable scan factor based on the Hounsfield scale. Each elemental region of the CT image (pixel) is expressed in terms of Hounsfield units (HU) corresponding to the x-ray attenuation (or tissue density).
CT numbers are displayed as gray-scale pixels on the viewing monitor. White represents pixels with higher CT numbers (bone). Varying shades of gray are assigned to intermediate CT numbers e.g., soft tissues, fluid and fat. Black represents regions with lower CT numbers like lungs and air-filled organs.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 02:01:00]