Energy resolved photon-counting mammography is a new technology, which counts the number of photons that passes through an object, and presents it as a pixel value in an image of the object. Silicon semiconductor detectors are currently used in commercial mammography. However, the disadvantage of silicon is the low absorption efficiency for high X-ray energies. A cadmium telluride (CdTe) series detector has a high absorption efficiency over a wide energy range. In this study, we proposed a method to estimate the composition of the mammary gland using a CdTe series detector as a photon-counting detector. The fact that the detection rate of breast cancer in mammography is affected by mammary gland composition is now widely accepted. Assessment of composition of the mammary gland has important implications. An important advantage of our proposed technique is its ability to discriminate photons using three energy bins. We designed the CdTe series detector system using the MATLAB simulation software. The phantom contains nine regions with the ratio of glandular tissue and adipose varying in increments of 10%. The attenuation coefficient for each bin’s energy was calculated from the number of input and output photons possessed by each. The evaluation results obtained by plotting the attenuation coefficient μ in a three-dimensional (3D) scatter plot show that the plots had a regular composition order congruent with that of the mammary gland. Consequently, we believe that our proposed method can be used to estimate the composition of the mammary gland.
[1]
S. Molloi,et al.
Photon counting computed tomography: concept and initial results.
,
2005,
Medical physics.
[2]
Andrew D. A. Maidment,et al.
Evaluation of a photon-counting breast tomosynthesis imaging system
,
2006,
SPIE Medical Imaging.
[3]
E. Nygard,et al.
Photon counting energy dispersive detector arrays for x-ray imaging
,
2007,
2007 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record.
[4]
J N Wolfe,et al.
Breast pattern classification and observer error.
,
1978,
Radiology.
[5]
J. Iwanczyk,et al.
Photon Counting Energy Dispersive Detector Arrays for X-ray Imaging
,
2007,
IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science.
[6]
G. Barnes,et al.
Semiempirical model for generating tungsten target x-ray spectra.
,
1991,
Medical physics.