Paper
16 April 1973 Dynamic Computer Generated Displays For Study Of The Human Left Ventricle
James F. Greenleaf, Eric L. Ritman, Earl H. Wood, Robert L. Frye, Richard A. Robb, Steven A. Johnson
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0032, Developments in Electronic Imaging Techniques II; (1973) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.953606
Event: Developments in Electronic Imaging Techniques, 1972, San Mateo, United States
Abstract
Many specific diagnoses of diseases of the heart can be obtained in cardiac catheterization laboratories. Dynamic changes in volume and distributions of coronary blood flow are studied by means of injecting roentgen-opaque (i.e., x-ray dense) material into the left ventricle or the right ventricle through a catheter whose tip has been threaded into the heart via a puncture in a peripheral vein or artery such as femoral artery in the leg. At the time of the injection of contrast media, the chest of the patient is irradiated with x-ray and dynamic movements of the opacified heart are projected onto a'fluoro scopic screen and then recorded on videotape by a television system or on film by a photographic system. Although cine roentgenography (that using film) can have higher spatial and temporal resolution (Ref. 1) than video roentgenography (that using television), the cine systems require a longer time to complete the diagnosis since the film must be developed.
© (1973) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
James F. Greenleaf, Eric L. Ritman, Earl H. Wood, Robert L. Frye, Richard A. Robb, and Steven A. Johnson "Dynamic Computer Generated Displays For Study Of The Human Left Ventricle", Proc. SPIE 0032, Developments in Electronic Imaging Techniques II, (16 April 1973); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.953606
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Video

Heart

Computing systems

Televisions

Data acquisition

Computer simulations

Analog electronics

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