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Three dimensional radiography
The newest innovation in dental radiography is
three dimensional radiography. The technology that
produces these three dimensional images is called Cone Beam
Computerized Tomography (CBCT). As the price of these
machines come down, more and more of them will be showing up in
dental offices. The technological innovation that made
this technology possible was partly improvements in x-ray and
sensor
technology, but even more important were ever faster and cheaper computers with enormous
memory capacity and some very innovative graphics programming.
And indeed, it is the capacity to store and
quickly process huge amounts of data that can be
computationally manipulated to reveal internal structures in the
human body in virtually any orientation. Today it takes
only a few minutes for a computer to create three dimensional
images for the clinician. In contrast, the first
CT scanner,
unveiled in 1972 took two and a half hours of number crunching to produce a single
two dimensional slice using the fastest computer available at
that time.
Cone beam technology gives the clinician
undreamed of information, and using all the computational power
of a late generation computer, he or she can image bone and soft
tissue in high resolution, see normal and pathological anatomy,
and even measure structures accurately for procedures such as
implants, root canals and reconstructive surgery.

Image courtesy of
Central Maxillofacial Radiology/Imaging
Centre (CMI Centre)
How does the Cone Beam work?

The principles used in three-dimensional
radiography are really the same ones that form the basis of
CT scanning.
Like linear array CT scanners, cone beam images are made on a
machine with a rotating gantry, a continuously operating x-ray
source, and a detector array. Unlike the fan shaped beam used
in a CT scan, however, CBCT uses a cone, or pyramid shaped beam, and the linear array
of detectors used in CT is replaced with a two
dimensional array similar to a very large version
of the
CCD's used in intraoral digital radiography. The
patient is generally seated so that the area of interest (in the
dental world, it is usually the mandible and/or maxilla) is
centered in the beam. The patient is seated in such a way
that the axis of rotation is centered in the area of interest.
The x-ray source and the detector revolve around the patient in
unison, the same as is done in a CT scan.
During the rotation of the device, between 150
and 600 images are captured by the detector. The images,
again called views, are simple two dimensional arrays of
pixels, and each one, by itself, resembles an ordinary AP or
Lat (anterior-posterior or lateral) view of the field of view. A single rotation is all that is
required to capture a three dimensional image of the structures
in the field.
A three-dimensional image needs different
terminology to describe its individual picture elements.
We are used to speaking in terms of pixels (meaning picture
elements) when dealing with ordinary digital images.
However the term used when dealing with three dimensional
picture elements is "voxels". A voxel has not
only height and width, as does a pixel, but it has depth as
well.
The Algorithms
Each
view represents a coherent two-dimensional image recognizable by
the human eye, so it is easy to visualize the motion picture
analogy used when discussing the
Clark shift on the CT scanning
page. Just as important, however, is the fact that each
individual pixel on any given view represents the total density
of all objects that the x-ray beam had to traverse on its
journey between the x-ray source and the pixel detector that
registers it. Thus one of the
algorithms
used in creating the final image involves steps similar to the
steps used in creating slices in the plane of the beam, just
like the algorithm used in CT scans. (Click on the icon to
the right to read this section if you haven't already done so.)
Another algorithm
used to manipulate
the huge amount of data resulting from up to 600 very large
two-dimensional digital images,
plus the data from the third dimension accumulated in the first step discussed above, boils
down to a really complex
mathematical version of the much simpler mechanical algorithm a draftsman
uses to draw a three-dimensional view of an object, using just a
couple of two-dimensional orthographic drawings.
The orthographic drawings in the left hand image
above are
two-dimensional views of a "widget". These
simple drawings
represent simplified versions of the
two-dimensional views of the much more complex image captured by
the cone beam detector. The letters stand for the lengths of
each vertical and horizontal line in the drawing. In order
to get from the multiple two-dimensional drawings on the left to
the three dimensional drawing on the right, the draftsman uses a
T-square and a 30 degree triangle.
The triangle allows the draftsman to draw lines at right
angles to the T-square, as well as lines at 30 degrees in either
direction. He begins by using a set of axes at 30 degrees,
like the one on the left above. He
then measures along the three axes using the same measurements
taken from the orthographic drawings. He draws all
horizontal lines along the thirty degree axes, and the vertical
lines remain at ninety degrees to the t-square.

Finally, he adds the missing vertical and
horizontal lines and ends up with the three dimensional drawing.
The mathematical transforms used in CBCT, while
immensely complex, go about their business in nearly the same
manner as the draftsman. The cone beam image is, of
course, much more complex, with many layers of internal
structure, but the principles are the same. Instead of
three images of the object looked at from three different
angles, the cone beam uses hundreds of images taken from
hundreds of angles, as well as the depth "slice" images created
using the first algorithm described on the CT scan page.
Another advantage the computer enjoys is that once the initial three-dimensional
image is constructed, it can rapidly rotate the image to any angle,
slice any part of the image at any angle, and allow the
practitioner to take virtually any measurement he or she wants.
It also allows the practitioner to cut virtual windows through
exterior layers to reveal the hidden interior anatomical
structures in three dimensions.
Dosing considerations
Cone Beam technology provides a very significant
dose reduction as compared to the conventional CT used for
maxillofacial imaging. While older CT scans can expose a patient to
an
effective dose of up to 2000
mSV, a cone beam scan confined to the maxilofacial region can
reduce this dose by up to 98.5%. It does this for a number
of reasons:
-
CBCT x-ray sources are tuned for seeing hard
tissues which means that unlike CT scanners, cone beams are
low intensity, high energy beams. This means fewer
x-ray photons are needed per image, less absorption in soft
tissues and less scatter.
-
The sensors are exquisitely sensitive and
need fewer photons to illuminate them.
-
The collimation can be controlled by the
operator to allow the beam to illuminate only the portion of
the body under consideration.
-
The scan is quite rapid, which not
only reduces the patient's exposure to ionizing radiation, but
also reduces distortion due to patient movement.
Resolution
For our purposes, resolution is most easily
defined as the fuzziness of the image.
Cone beam sensors have a wide range of spatial definition, from
0.4 mm to as low as 0.076 mm. A machine with the 0.4 mm
resolution would present images with fuzzier edges than one with
the 0.076 mm resolution. On the other hand, the sensors
are so sensitive that the highest resolution images are somewhat
degraded due to noise and contrast artifacts caused by large
amounts of scatter radiation, so there is probably a practical
limit on the need to strive to buy the very highest resolution
machines for normal clinical practice.
Other advantages to cone beam technology
Viewing hidden structures in three-dimensions
gives the clinician the ability to see spatial relationships at
a glance. Even without advanced software modules, once the
three-dimensional image is rendered, the ability to see the bony
structures and to rotate the image so that they can be seen from
any angle makes diagnosis and treatment planning easier and more
accurate. This includes assessment of bony and dental
pathologies, recognition of structural maxilofacial deformities
and fractures, preoperative assessment of impacted teeth, TMJ
imaging, orthodontic evaluations, and assessment for the
adequacy of bone available for implant placement.
Advanced software rendering techniques are
limited only by the imagination of the software developer.
These include, but are not limited to the following:
-
The on-screen objects are neither
distorted nor magnified. Thus the clinician can make
accurate on-screen measurements of dental and bony
structures using various on-screen measuring
techniques and record them on a separate layer which may be
overlaid on the original image
-
slicing the image in virtually any plane,
not limited to axial, sagittal and coronal planes, which
creates images similar to those produced by a CT
scanner.
-
Magnification, or zooming in on specific
areas of interest
-
Cutting virtual windows through more
superficial structures in order to view the underlying
structures in anatomic relation to the overlying structures.
-
The ability to add annotations including
drawings and alphanumeric information to layers which are
overlaid on top of the original image, but may be removed en
masse for better visualization of the original image.
Legal ramifications
Alas! All is not a bed of roses in the world of
cone beam imaging. With the improved technologies come
increased responsibilities. A dentist might use his cone
beam image for the reasons specific to his specialty, such as
assessment for the adequacy of bone for implant placement, but
if he or she does not recognize abnormal anatomical structures,
he or she could be held legally responsible if the patient
suffers future injuries relating to that missed observation.
For example, if an adenocarcinoma has caused visible distortion
or disintegration of any boney structure seen in the scan, the
dentist is responsible for notifying the patient and referring
the patient to an appropriate specialist, or baring that, for
enlisting the help of a board certified radiologist to assess
the images.
This also means that if the image includes the
entire sinus region, the dentist is responsible for recognizing
abnormalities in the sinus, even though this lies outside of his
area of expertise and he has no training in that subject.
For this reason, it is unwise to begin
using cone beam images until the clinician has had at least some
training on the recognition of abnormalities in any part of the
head or neck that he plans to image. Even if the scan is
done by referral to another office, it remains the
responsibility of the referring dentist to recognize pathology
when he or she sees it. Conversely, any dentist who
accepts referrals to use his or her cone beam for a patient from
another office can be held legally responsible for not correctly
reading possibly harmful pathological conditions on the scan,
(and thus not notifying the referring dentist or the patient)
even if the patient is not a patient of record in his own
office.
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Dentists and allied dental professionals often
seek CE courses from ADA CERP recognized providers to fulfill their
CE requirements for re-licensure. Most state and
provincial licensing boards will accept CE credits issued by ADA
CERP recognized providers. In the spring of 2003, the FDI World
Dental Federation became the first internationally based CE provider
to be granted ADA CERP recognition.
Please contact your state board directly for their specific rules
and regulations. Most states approve supervised self-study courses
that are ADA CERP accredited.
Those dentists, hygienists, dental assistants
and radiographers interested in receiving 3 continuing
education credits for this course may take a 10 question test at a
cost of $35 and receive their certificate immediately by clicking
here.
Those dentists, hygienists, dental assistants
and radiographers interested in receiving 8 continuing
education credits for this course may take a 25 question test at a
cost of $66 and receive their certificate immediately by clicking
here.
Note: There are no questions on tables or
Glossary. |
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