In several medical centers computed radiography has almost completely replaced the use of conventional screen-film systems for general radiography. The aim of this paper is to explain the basic principles of the four most frequently numerical detectors used in the world, with emphasis on the phosphor plates, which are the most frequently used both in hospitals and by practitioners. The other two systems are based on a receptor with selenium. The fourth uses charged coupled device (CCD) detectors. The most important principles of digital processing are then described with concentration on unsharp mask filtering. In the future computed radiography will replace standard radiology and will create a system in medicine using the power of computers to archive--with more efficiency and less space--patient medical data. The transmission of data to workstations and the processing of this data is the topic of a new field in medicine.
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