Gated cardiac computed tomography with a motion phantom.

Abstract
CT computed tomography images of the [human] heart are significantly degraded by the effects of motion during the scanning interval. The use of electrocardiographic (ECG) gating to provide stop-action cardiac images remains limited by artifacts. A motion phantom was constructed to allow systematic study of the artifact structure of ECG-gated images and to isolate the origins of these artifacts. Stop-action reconstructed images are presented demonstrating 2 classes of artifacts: pinwheel artifacts that appear at the edges of high-contrast moving objects and linear streaks occurring in relation to missing views when an incomplete angular set of projections is used for image reconstruction with the convolution back-projection algorithm. These results underscore the use of the motion phantom for the analysis of image artifacts and stress the need for new CT reconstruction algorithms which are optimized for stop-action scanning.