Paper
22 May 1997 Filmless digital chest radiography within the radiology department
Gregory G. Reiker, Hartwig R. Blume, Richard M. Slone, Pamela K. Woodard, David S. Gierada, Stuart S. Sagel, R. Gilbert Jost M.D., G. James Blaine
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The technical purposes of this work were to develop improvements in the methodology for assessing the physical performance of CRT monitors and display controller systems and to explore image processing techniques to make soft- and hard-copy image quality visually similar. The clinical purpose was to determine whether, with proper image processing, soft-copy presentations of digital chest radiographs could become equivalent to hard-copy for visualizing normal and pathological features. The luminance characteristic curve, luminance uniformity, modulation transfer function, and noise power spectra of the CRT monitors as well as video waveforms of a display controller were measured. Posteroanterior and lateral chest radiographs were acquired by a dedicated thorax imaging system with a selenium detector and processed using a previously optimized algorithm for printing on film. A Laplacian pyramid filter was employed to compensate for the mid- to high-frequency contrast losses in the soft-copy presentation. Five chest radiologists directly compared the soft- and hard-copy presentations in eighteen patients with CT-proven pathologies. Based on 99 percent confidence intervals, the soft-copy images were preferred for seven of the fourteen anatomic categories and image contrast, and the hard-copy images were preferred for brightness and image granularity. There were no preferences for the depiction of pathologies, spatial resolution, and the remaining anatomic categories. After determining the physical properties of the CRT monitors, image processing operations can be defined to produce soft-copy renditions of soft-copy displays for primary diagnosis to make digital radiography more cost- effective and to encourage additional development of filmless image interpretation and management in a PACS.
© (1997) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Gregory G. Reiker, Hartwig R. Blume, Richard M. Slone, Pamela K. Woodard, David S. Gierada, Stuart S. Sagel, R. Gilbert Jost M.D., and G. James Blaine "Filmless digital chest radiography within the radiology department", Proc. SPIE 3035, Medical Imaging 1997: PACS Design and Evaluation: Engineering and Clinical Issues, (22 May 1997); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.274591
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 10 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
CRTs

Image processing

Modulation transfer functions

Image quality

Contrast transfer function

Displays

Modulation

Back to Top