Abstract

BackgroundGrating-based x-ray dark-field and phase-contrast imaging allow extracting information about refraction and small-angle scatter, beyond conventional attenuation. A step towards clinical translation has recently been achieved, allowing further investigation on humans.MethodsAfter the ethics committee approval, we scanned the full body of a human cadaver in anterior-posterior orientation. Six measurements were stitched together to form the whole-body image. All radiographs were taken at a three-grating large-object x-ray dark-field scanner, each lasting about 40 s. Signal intensities of different anatomical regions were assessed. The magnitude of visibility reduction caused by beam hardening instead of small-angle scatter was analysed using different phantom materials. Maximal effective dose was 0.3 mSv for the abdomen.ResultsCombined attenuation and dark-field radiography are technically possible throughout a whole human body. High signal levels were found in several bony structures, foreign materials, and the lung. Signal levels were 0.25 ± 0.13 (mean ± standard deviation) for the lungs, 0.08 ± 0.06 for the bones, 0.023 ± 0.019 for soft tissue, and 0.30 ± 0.02 for an antibiotic bead chain. We found that phantom materials, which do not produce small-angle scatter, can generate a strong visibility reduction signal.ConclusionWe acquired a whole-body x-ray dark-field radiograph of a human body in few minutes with an effective dose in a clinical acceptable range. Our findings suggest that the observed visibility reduction in the bone and metal is dominated by beam hardening and that the true dark-field signal in the lung is therefore much higher than that of the bone.

Highlights

  • Grating-based x-ray dark-field and phase-contrast imaging allow extracting information about refraction and small-angle scatter, beyond conventional attenuation

  • We presented the first whole-body x-ray dark-field images of a human body

  • Besides the x-ray attenuation, which is measured by conventional x-ray imaging, wave-optical effects such as refraction and small-angle scatter of x-rays occur on interaction with matter

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Summary

Introduction

Grating-based x-ray dark-field and phase-contrast imaging allow extracting information about refraction and small-angle scatter, beyond conventional attenuation. Besides the x-ray attenuation, which is measured by conventional x-ray imaging, wave-optical effects such as refraction and small-angle scatter of x-rays occur on interaction with matter. By placing three gratings in the beam path of a conventional source, intensity modulations are created from which the phase and small-angle scatter information can be obtained. Attenuation, differential phase, and darkfield images of a sample placed in the beam path can be calculated form these recorded modulations [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. The dark-field image provides a measure for the magnitude of small-angle x-ray scattering induced by a sample. The correlation between dark-field signal and microscopic sample parameters has been examined in detail [11,12,13]

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