Miyakawa M
Department of Information Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Niigata University, Japan.
Med Biol Eng Comput. 1993 Jul;31 Suppl:S31-6. doi: 10.1007/BF02446647.
The chirp radar-type microwave computed tomograph (CT) measures the temperature change in a human body noninvasively. The paper examines its feasibility. A chirp pulse signal between 1 and 2 GHz is radiated from the transmitting antenna to the phantom. The transmitted waves are detected by the receiving antenna, which is placed on the opposite side of the object, and the beat signal between the incident wave and the transmitted wave is produced by the mixer. By spectral analysis of the beat signal, only those signals transmitted on the straight line between the transmitting antenna and the receiving antenna are discriminated from multipath signals. The microwave tomogram can therefore be reconstructed easily using the conventional algorithms for an X-ray CT image. The microwave CT can use the chirp signal to remove the influence of multipath signals caused by diffraction and reflection. The imaging of dielectric materials with complicated structures is thus possible. The experimental results using phantoms show that the spatial resolution of this microwave CT is about 10 mm and that a two-dimensional distribution of temperature change can be measured.
线性调频雷达型微波计算机断层扫描仪(CT)可无创测量人体温度变化。本文研究了其可行性。一个1至2吉赫兹的线性调频脉冲信号从发射天线辐射到人体模型。发射波由放置在物体另一侧的接收天线检测,混频器产生入射波与发射波之间的差拍信号。通过对差拍信号进行频谱分析,仅从多径信号中区分出在发射天线和接收天线之间直线上传输的那些信号。因此,利用传统的X射线CT图像算法可以轻松重建微波断层图像。微波CT可以使用线性调频信号来消除由衍射和反射引起的多径信号的影响。从而能够对具有复杂结构的介电材料进行成像。使用人体模型的实验结果表明,这种微波CT的空间分辨率约为10毫米,并且可以测量温度变化的二维分布。