Definition of CT scan
Our CT scan Main Article provides a comprehensive look at the who, what, when and how of CT scan
CT scan: Computerized tomography scan. Pictures of structures within the body created by a computer that takes the data from multiple X-ray images and turns them into pictures on a screen. CT stands for computerized tomography.
The CT scan can reveal some soft-tissue and other structures that
cannot even be seen in conventional X-rays. Using the same dosage of
radiation as that of an ordinary X-ray machine, an entire slice of
the body can be made visible with about 100 times more clarity with
the CT scan.
The tomograms ("cuts") for CT are usually made 5 or 10 mm apart.
The CT machine rotates 180 degrees around the patient's body. The
machine sends out a thin X-ray beam at 160 different points. Crystals
positioned at the opposite points of the beam pick up and record the
absorption rates of the varying thicknesses of tissue and bone. The
data are then relayed to a computer that turns the information into a
2-dimensional cross-sectional image.
The CT scanner was invented in 1972 by the British engineer
Godfrey N. Hounsfield (later Sir Godfrey) and the South African
(later American) physicist Alan Cormack. CT scanning was already in
general use by 1979, the year Hounsfield and Cormack were awarded the
Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology for its development.
The CT scan is also known as the CAT (computerized axial
tomography) scan.
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