Computed Tomography, also known as CT or CAT scanning, is among the most revolutionary imaging methods in present-day medicine, providing an uncomplicated, stratified view of the body that X-rays cannot. Computed tomography was first introduced in the 1970s and transformed the way doctors identified diseases, injuries, and unusual occurrences inside the body. This was possible due to images of organs, blood vessels, bones, and soft tissues in incredible detail. Before the 1970s, obtaining clear images of the body required surgery or educated guesswork by the doctor; After the introduction of computed tomography, obtaining clear images of the body was now possible within minutes through a painless and non-invasive scan.
Computed tomography uses a rotating X-ray beam to circle the patient, taking hundreds of cross-sectional images from various angles. These images are then processed by using powerful computers to generate detailed two-dimensional pictures or sometimes even three-dimensional rebuilding. This capability to view inside the body, one layer after another, makes computed tomography essential for examining complex regions like the brain, chest, abdomen, and spinal cord. Even if it’s the identification of a small stroke, the identification of a nodule in the lung, mapping fractures, or guiding while treating cancer, computed tomography provides clarification where accuracy matters the most.











Appointment
Call
More