Categories Indicate the Suitability of Different Methods in Particular Use-Cases

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Misalignment of the rotation axis causes severe artifacts in X-ray computed tomography. Calibration of this parameter is often insufficient for sub-micron resolution measurements and needs to be corrected during the post-processing. This correction can be accelerated by various automatic methods. These vary in mechanisms and performance, making them suitable for different use-cases. This work summarizes existing automatic methods for estimating the rotation axis in X-ray computed tomography, with a focus on sub-micron applications. Some of the methods are implemented and compared in the context of a laboratory sub-micron scanner to demonstrate practical considerations of this task. Chest pain is one of the most common presentations to emergency departments. However, only 5.1% will be diagnosed with an acute coronary syndrome, representing considerable time and expense in the diagnosis and investigation of the patients eventually found not to be suffering from an acute coronary syndrome. PubMed and Medline databases were searched with variations of the terms “chest pain”, “emergency department”, “computed tomography coronary angiography”. After review, 52 articles were included. Computed tomography coronary angiography (CTCA) is a class I endorsement for investigating chest pain in major international societal guidelines. CTCA offers excellent sensitivity and negative predictive value in identifying patients with coronary disease, with prognostic data impacting patient management. If CTCA is to be applied to all comers, it is pertinent to discuss the advantages and potential pitfalls if use in the Australian system is to be increased. PubMed and Medline databases were searched to identify relevant journal articles. Search terms included “chest pain AND emergency department”, “chest pain AND computed tomography coronary angiography”. Reference lists of articles were reviewed further to identify articles. Inclusion criteria included original research, review articles, meta-analyses; and exclusion criteria were language other than English and case reports with the end result of 54 articles being included.

With Regards,
Sara Giselle
Associate Managing Editor
Journal of Medical Physics and Applied Scinces