We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us
GLOBETECH PUBLISHING LLC

Siemens Healthineers

Provides customized electronic systems and advanced imaging, diagnostics, therapy, and healthcare IT solutions for th... read more Featured Products: More products

Download Mobile App




Innovative X-Ray Tube and Detector Technology Developed for Angiography Applications

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 29 Jan 2013
Print article
Image: The Artis Q.zen angiography system (Photo courtesy of Siemens Healthacre).
Image: The Artis Q.zen angiography system (Photo courtesy of Siemens Healthacre).
Newly designed X-ray tubes in an angiography range of systems are intended to help clinicians identify small vessels up to 70% better than traditional X-ray tube technology. The angiography systems combine a novel X-ray source with a new detector technology designed to support interventional imaging in very low-dose ranges to patients, physicians, and medical staff—especially during longer interventions.

Siemens Healthcare (Erlangen, Germany) designed its new X-ray tube and detector technology for its Artis Q and Artis Q.zen angiography systems, which Siemens has designed to improve minimally invasive therapy of diseases such as coronary artery disease, stroke, and cancer.

The second-generation of Siemens’ flat emitter technology is vital to the latest development made in the X-ray tube for the Artis Q and Artis Q.zen product range. In place of the coiled filaments used in traditional X-ray tubes, flat emitter technology is used exclusively in the new tube to emit electrons. Flat emitters are designed to enable smaller quadratic focal spots that lead to improved visibility of small vessels by up to 70%. With this technology, neurologists can more precisely measure blood circulation in specific areas of the brain, for example, whereas stenoses in the smallest blood vessels in the heart can be detected in coronary angiography.

The Artis Q.zen series has been designed to combine the X-ray tube with a detector technology that allows detection at ultralow radiation levels. Artis Q.zen imaging can use doses as low as half the standard levels applied in angiography. This enhancement is the result of several innovations, including an essential change in detector technology. Until now, almost all detectors have been based on amorphous silicon. The new crystalline silicon structure of the Artis Q.zen detector is designed to be more homogenous, allowing for more effective amplification of the signal, greatly reducing the electronic noise even at ultralow doses.

The Artis Q.zen was developed to support enhanced imaging quality at ultralow-dose ranges, decreasing the radiation exposure of patients, physicians, and medical staff. This is especially important in dose-sensitive application fields such as radiology and pediatric cardiology, or electrophysiology, which is being used more frequently as rates of cardiac arrhythmia increase in an aging population.

Several software tools, in addition to these hardware developments, have been designed to improve interventional imaging. In coronary artery disease treatment, the applications allow precise correlation of angiography images with ultrasound images captured by a probe inside the coronary arteries. Stents are imaged in real time during therapy, with motion stabilization created by simultaneous correction for the heartbeat.

Other new three-dimensional (3D) applications are designed to image the smallest structures inside the head. Their high spatial resolution is crucial for imaging intracranial stents or other miniscule structures such as the cochlea in the inner ear. Moving organs such as the lungs can be imaged in 3D in less than 3 seconds, reducing motion artifacts and the required amount of contrast agent. Through visualization and measurement of blood volumes in the liver or other organs, Siemens’ functional 3D imaging provides a basis for planning therapies such as chemoembolization of hepatic tumors.

Related Links:

Siemens Healthcare



Portable Color Doppler Ultrasound Scanner
DCU10
NMUS & MSK Ultrasound
InVisus Pro
Silver Member
X-Ray QA Meter
T3 AD Pro
Wall Fixtures
MRI SERIES

Print article

Channels

Ultrasound

view channel
Image: Ultrasound detection of vascular changes post-RT corresponds to shifts in the immune microenvironment (Photo courtesy of Theranostics, DOI:10.7150/thno.97759)

Ultrasound Imaging Non-Invasively Tracks Tumor Response to Radiation and Immunotherapy

While immunotherapy holds promise in the fight against triple-negative breast cancer, many patients fail to respond to current treatments. A major challenge has been predicting and monitoring how individual... Read more

Nuclear Medicine

view channel
Image: [18F]3F4AP in a human subject after mild incomplete spinal cord injury (Photo courtesy of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, DOI:10.2967/jnumed.124.268242)

Novel PET Technique Visualizes Spinal Cord Injuries to Predict Recovery

Each year, around 18,000 individuals in the United States experience spinal cord injuries, leading to severe mobility loss that often results in a lifelong battle to regain independence and improve quality of life.... Read more

General/Advanced Imaging

view channel
Image: The rugged and miniaturized CT scanner is being designed for use beyond a typical hospital setting (Photo courtesy of Micro-X)

World’s First Mobile Whole-Body CT Scanner to Provide Diagnostics at POC

Conventional CT scanners dominate the global medical imaging market, holding approximately 30% of the market share. These scanners are the current standard for various diagnostic applications, including... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: The new Medical Imaging Suite makes healthcare imaging data more accessible, interoperable and useful (Photo courtesy of Google Cloud)

New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible

Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2025 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.