DRR(1) | Plastimatch | DRR(1) |
drr - create a digitally reconstructed radiograph
drr [options] [infile]
A digitally reconstructed radiograph (DRR) is a synthetic radiograph which can be generated from a computed tomography (CT) scan. It is used as a reference image for verifying the correct setup position of a patient prior to radiation treatment.
The drr program that comes with plastimatch takes a CT image as input, and generates one or more output images. The input image is in MHA format, and the output images can be either pgm, pfm, or raw format. The command line usage is:
Usage: drr [options] [infile] Options:
-A hardware Either "cpu" or "cuda" (default=cpu)
-a num Generate num equally spaced angles
-N angle Difference between neighboring angles (in degrees)
-nrm "x y z" Set the normal vector for the panel
-vup "x y z" Set the vup vector (toward top row) for the panel
-g "sad sid" Set the sad, sid (in mm)
-r "r c" Set output resolution (in pixels)
-s scale Scale the intensity of the output file
-e Do exponential mapping of output values
-c "r c" Set the image center (in pixels)
-z "s1 s2" Set the physical size of imager (in mm)
-w "r1 r2 c1 c2" Only produce image for pixes in window (in pix)
-t outformat Select output format: pgm, pfm or raw
-i algorithm Choose algorithm {exact,uniform}
-o "o1 o2 o3" Set isocenter position
-I infile Set the input file in mha format
-O outprefix Generate output files using the specified prefix
The drr program can be used in either single image mode or rotational mode. In single image mode, you specify the complete geometry of the x-ray source and imaging panel for a single image. In rotational mode, the imaging geometry is assumed to be
The command line options are described in more details as follows.
When using CPU hardware, DRR generation uses OpenMP for multicore acceleration if your compiler supports this. Gcc and Microsoft Visual Studio Professional compilers support OpenMP, but Microsoft Visual Studio Express does not.
At the current time, cuda acceleration is not working.
The following example illustrates the use of single image mode:
drr -nrm "1 0 0" \
-vup "0 0 1" \
-g "1000 1500" \
-r "1024 768" \
-z "400 300" \
-c "383.5 511.5" \
-o "0 -20 -50" \
input_file.mha
In the above example, the isocenter is chosen to be (0, -20, -50), the location marked on the CT image. The orientation of the projection image is controlled by the nrm and vup options. Using the default values of (1, 0, 0) and (0, 0, 1) yields the DRR shown on the right: [image] [image]
By changing the normal direction (nrm), we can choose different beam direction within an isocentric orbit. For example, an anterior-posterior (AP) DRR is generated with a normal of (0, -1, 0) as shown below: [image]
The rotation of the imaging panel is selected using the vup option. The default value of vup is (0, 0, 1), which means that the top of the panel is oriented toward the positive z direction in world coordinates. If we wanted to rotate the panel by 45 degrees counter-clockwise on our AP view, we would set vup to the (1, 0, 1) direction, as shown in the image below. Note that vup doesn't have to be normalized. [image]
In rotional mode, multiple images are created. The source and imaging panel are assumed to rotate in a circular orbit around the isocenter. The circular orbit is performed around the Z axis, and the images are generated every -N ang degrees of the orbit. This is illustrated using the following example:
drr -N 20 \
-a 18 \
-g "1000 1500" \
-r "1024 768" \
-z "400 300" \
-o "0 -20 -50" \
input_file.mha
In the above example, 18 images are generated at a 20 degree interval, as follows: [image]
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Plastimatch development team (C) 2010-2015. You are free to use, modify, and distribute plastimatch according to a BSD-style license. Please see LICENSE.TXT for details.
January 8, 2019 | Plastimatch 1.7.4 |