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1.
PurposeWe compare image quality parameters derived from phantom images taken on three commercially available radiotherapy CT simulators. To make an unbiased evaluation, we assured images were obtained with the same surface dose measured using XR-QA2 model GafChromic™ film placed at the imaging phantom surface for all three CT-simulators.MethodsRadiotherapy CT simulators GE LS 16, Philips Brilliance Big Bore, and Toshiba Aquilion LB were compared in terms of spatial resolution, low contrast detectability, image uniformity, and contrast to noise ratio using CATPHAN-504 phantom, scanned with Head and Pelvis protocols. Dose was measured at phantom surface, with CT scans repeated until doses on all scanners were within 2%.ResultsIn terms of spatial resolution, the GE simulator appears slightly better, while Philips CT images are superior in terms of SNR for both scanning protocols. The CNR results show that Philips CT images appear to be better, except for high Z material, while Toshiba appears to fit in between the two simulators.ConclusionsWhile the image quality parameters for three RT CT simulators show comparable results, the scanner bore size is of vital importance in various radiotherapy applications. Since the image quality is a function of a large number of confounding parameters, any loss in image quality due to scanner bore size could be compensated by the appropriate choice of scanning parameters, including the exposure and by balancing between the additional imaging dose to the patient and high image quality required in highly conformal RT techniques.  相似文献   

2.
PurposeTo study the feasibility of using an iterative reconstruction algorithm to improve previously reconstructed CT images which are judged to be non-diagnostic on clinical review. A novel rapidly converging, iterative algorithm (RSEMD) to reduce noise as compared with standard filtered back-projection algorithm has been developed.Materials and methodsThe RSEMD method was tested on in-silico, Catphan®500, and anthropomorphic 4D XCAT phantoms. The method was applied to noisy CT images previously reconstructed with FBP to determine improvements in SNR and CNR. To test the potential improvement in clinically relevant CT images, 4D XCAT phantom images were used to simulate a small, low contrast lesion placed in the liver.ResultsIn all of the phantom studies the images proved to have higher resolution and lower noise as compared with images reconstructed by conventional FBP. In general, the values of SNR and CNR reached a plateau at around 20 iterations with an improvement factor of about 1.5 for in noisy CT images. Improvements in lesion conspicuity after the application of RSEMD have also been demonstrated. The results obtained with the RSEMD method are in agreement with other iterative algorithms employed either in image space or with hybrid reconstruction algorithms.ConclusionsIn this proof of concept work, a rapidly converging, iterative deconvolution algorithm with a novel resolution subsets-based approach that operates on DICOM CT images has been demonstrated. The RSEMD method can be applied to sub-optimal routine-dose clinical CT images to improve image quality to potentially diagnostically acceptable levels.  相似文献   

3.
PurposeAnti-scatter grids suppress the scatter substantially thus improving image contrast in radiography. However, its active use in cone-beam CT for the purpose of improving contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) has not been successful mainly due to the increased noise related to Poisson statistics of photons. This paper proposes a sparse-view scanning approach to address the above issue.MethodCompared to the conventional cone-beam CT imaging framework, the proposed method reduces the number of projections and increases exposure in each projection to enhance image quality without an additional cost of radiation dose to patients. For image reconstruction from sparse-view data, an adaptive-steepest-descent projection-onto-convex-sets (ASD POCS) algorithm regularized by total-variation (TV) minimization was adopted. Contrast and CNR with various scattering conditions were evaluated in projection domain by a simulation study using GATE. Then we evaluated contrast, resolution, and image uniformity in CT image domain with Catphan phantom. A head phantom with soft-tissue structures was also employed for demonstrating a realistic application. A virtual grid-based estimation and reduction of scatter has also been implemented for comparison with the real anti-scatter grid.ResultsIn the projection domain evaluation, contrast and CNR enhancement was observed when using an anti-scatter grid compared to the virtual grid. In the CT image domain, the proposed method produced substantially higher contrast and CNR of the low-contrast structures with much improved image uniformity.ConclusionWe have shown that the proposed method can provide high-quality CBCT images particularly with an increased contrast of soft-tissue at a neutral dose for image-guidance.  相似文献   

4.
PurposeBased on the guidelines from “Report 87: Radiation Dose and Image-quality Assessment in Computed Tomography” of the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU), a software framework for automated quantitative image quality analysis was developed and its usability for a variety of scientific questions demonstrated.MethodsThe extendable framework currently implements the calculation of the recommended Fourier image quality (IQ) metrics modulation transfer function (MTF) and noise-power spectrum (NPS), and additional IQ quantities such as noise magnitude, CT number accuracy, uniformity across the field-of-view, contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of simulated lesions for a commercially available cone-beam phantom. Sample image data were acquired with different scan and reconstruction settings on CT systems from different manufacturers.ResultsSpatial resolution is analyzed in terms of edge-spread function, line-spread-function, and MTF. 3D NPS is calculated according to ICRU Report 87, and condensed to 2D and radially averaged 1D representations. Noise magnitude, CT numbers, and uniformity of these quantities are assessed on large samples of ROIs. Low-contrast resolution (CNR, SNR) is quantitatively evaluated as a function of lesion contrast and diameter. Simultaneous automated processing of several image datasets allows for straightforward comparative assessment.ConclusionsThe presented framework enables systematic, reproducible, automated and time-efficient quantitative IQ analysis. Consistent application of the ICRU guidelines facilitates standardization of quantitative assessment not only for routine quality assurance, but for a number of research questions, e.g. the comparison of different scanner models or acquisition protocols, and the evaluation of new technology or reconstruction methods.  相似文献   

5.
PurposeWithin the SYRMA-CT collaboration based at the ELETTRA synchrotron radiation (SR) facility the authors investigated the imaging performance of the phase-contrast computed tomography (CT) system dedicated to monochromatic in vivo 3D imaging of the female breast, for breast cancer diagnosis.MethodsTest objects were imaged at 38 keV using monochromatic SR and a high-resolution CdTe photon-counting detector. Signal and noise performance were evaluated using modulation transfer function (MTF) and noise power spectrum. The analysis was performed on the images obtained with the application of a phase retrieval algorithm as well as on those obtained without phase retrieval. The contrast to noise ratio (CNR) and the capability of detecting test microcalcification clusters and soft masses were investigated.ResultsFor a voxel size of (60 μm)3, images without phase retrieval showed higher spatial resolution (6.7 mm−1 at 10% MTF) than corresponding images with phase retrieval (2.5 mm−1). Phase retrieval produced a reduction of the noise level and an increase of the CNR by more than one order of magnitude, compared to raw phase-contrast images. Microcalcifications with a diameter down to 130 μm could be detected in both types of images.ConclusionsThe investigation on test objects indicates that breast CT with a monochromatic SR source is technically feasible in terms of spatial resolution, image noise and contrast, for in vivo 3D imaging with a dose comparable to that of two-view mammography. Images obtained with the phase retrieval algorithm showed the best performance in the trade-off between spatial resolution and image noise.  相似文献   

6.
PurposeTo assess the quality of images obtained on a dual energy computed tomography (CT) scanner.MethodsImage quality was assessed on a 64 detector-row fast kVp-switching dual energy CT scanner (Revolution GSI, GE Medical Systems). The Catphan phantom and a low contrast resolution phantom were employed. Acquisitions were performed at eight different radiation dose levels that ranged from 9 mGy to 32 mGy. Virtual monochromatic spectral images (VMI) were reconstructed in the 40–140 keV range using all available kernels and iterative reconstruction (IR) at four different blending levels. Modulation Transfer Function (MTF) curves, image noise, image contrast, noise power spectrum and contrast to noise ratio were assessed.ResultsIn-plane spatial resolution at the 10% of the MTF curve was 0.60 mm−1. In-plane spatial resolution was not modified with VMI energy and IR blending level. Image noise was reduced from 16.6 at 9 mGy to 6.7 at 32 mGy, while peak frequency remained within 0.14 ± 0.01 mm−1. Image noise was reduced from 14.3 at IR 10% to 11.5 at IR 50% at a constant peak frequency. The lowest image noise and maximum peak frequency were recorded at 70 keV.ConclusionsOur results have shown how objective image quality is varied when different levels of radiation dose and different settings in IR are applied. These results provide CT operators an in depth understanding of the imaging performance characteristics in dual energy CT.  相似文献   

7.
PurposeTo evaluate the impact of Automatic Exposure Control (AEC) on radiation dose and image quality in paediatric chest scans (MDCT), with or without iterative reconstruction (IR).MethodsThree anthropomorphic phantoms representing children aged one, five and 10-year-old were explored using AEC system (CARE Dose 4D) with five modulation strength options. For each phantom, six acquisitions were carried out: one with fixed mAs (without AEC) and five each with different modulation strength. Raw data were reconstructed with Filtered Back Projection (FBP) and with two distinct levels of IR using soft and strong kernels. Dose reduction and image quality indices (Noise, SNR, CNR) were measured in lung and soft tissues. Noise Power Spectrum (NPS) was evaluated with a Catphan 600 phantom.ResultsThe use of AEC produced a significant dose reduction (p < 0.01) for all anthropomorphic sizes employed. According to the modulation strength applied, dose delivered was reduced from 43% to 91%. This pattern led to significantly increased noise (p < 0.01) and reduced SNR and CNR (p < 0.01). However, IR was able to improve these indices. The use of AEC/IR preserved image quality indices with a lower dose delivered. Doses were reduced from 39% to 58% for the one-year-old phantom, from 46% to 63% for the five-year-old phantom, and from 58% to 74% for the 10-year-old phantom. In addition, AEC/IR changed the patterns of NPS curves in amplitude and in spatial frequency.ConclusionsIn chest paediatric MDCT, the use of AEC with IR allows one to obtain a significant dose reduction while maintaining constant image quality indices.  相似文献   

8.
PurposeThe goal of this study was to investigate the performance of a pre-clinical SPECT/PET/CT system for 188Re imaging.MethodsPhantom experiments were performed aiming to assess the characteristics of two multi-pinhole collimators: ultra-high resolution collimator (UHRC) and high-energy ultra high resolution collimator (HE-URHC) for imaging 188Re. The spatial resolution, image contrast and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) were investigated using micro-Jaszczak phantoms. Additionally, the quantification accuracy of 188Re images was evaluated using two custom-designed phantoms. The 188Re images were compared to those obtained with 99mTc (gold standard); the acquired energy spectra were analyzed and Monte-Carlo simulations of the UHRC were performed. To verify our findings, a C57BL/6-mouse was injected with 188Re-microspheres and scanned with both collimators.ResultsThe spatial resolution achieved in 188Re images was comparable to that of 99mTc. Acquisitions using HE-UHRC yielded 188Re images with higher contrast and CNR than UHRC. Studies of quantitative accuracy of 188Re images resulted in <10% errors for both collimators when the activity was calculated within a small VOI around the object of interest. Similar quantification accuracy was achieved for 99mTc. However, 188Re images showed much higher levels of noise in the background. Monte-Carlo simulations showed that 188Re imaging with UHRC is severely affected by down-scattered photons from high-energy emissions. The mouse images showed similar biodistribution of 188Re-microspheres for both collimators.ConclusionsVECTor/CT provided 188Re images quantitatively accurate and with quality comparable to 99mTc. However, due to large penetration of UHRC by high-energy photons, the use of the HE-UHRC for imaging 188Re in VECTor/CT is recommended.  相似文献   

9.
PurposeWe aimed to identify the most accurate combination of phantom and protocol for image value to density table (IVDT) on volume-modulated arc therapy (VMAT) dose calculation based on kV-Cone-beam CT imaging, for head and neck (H&N) and pelvic localizations.MethodsThree phantoms (Catphan®600, CIRS®062M (inner phantom for head and outer phantom for body), and TomoTherapy® “Cheese” phantom) were used to create IVDT curves of CBCT systems with two different CBCT protocols (Standard-dose Head and Standard Pelvis). Hounsfield Unit (HU) time stability and repeatability for a single On-Board-Imager (OBI) and compatibility of two distinct devices were assessed with Catphan®600. Images from the anthropomorphic phantom CIRS ATOM® for both CT and CBCT modalities were used for VMAT dose calculation from different IVDT curves. Dosimetric indices from CT and CBCT imaging were compared.ResultsIVDT curves from CBCT images were highly different depending on phantom used (up to 1000 HU for high densities) and protocol applied (up to 200 HU for high densities). HU time stability was verified over seven weeks. A maximum difference of 3% on the dose calculation indices studied was found between CT and CBCT VMAT dose calculation across the two localizations using appropriate IVDT curves. One IVDT curve per localization can be established with a bi-monthly verification of IVDT-CBCT.ConclusionsThe IVDT-CBCTCIRS-Head phantom with the Standard-dose Head protocol was the most accurate combination for dose calculation on H&N CBCT images. For pelvic localizations, the IVDT-CBCTCheese established with the Standard Pelvis protocol provided the best accuracy.  相似文献   

10.
PurposeDemonstrate an objective procedure to quantify image quality in digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and suggest thresholds for acceptability and constancy tests.MethodsSeries of images were obtained in a DSA system simulating a small (paediatric) and a large patient using the dynamic phantom described in the IEC and DIN standards for acceptance tests of DSA equipment. Image quality was quantified using measurements of contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR). Overall scores combining the CNR of 10–100 mg/ml Iodine at a vascular diameter of 1–4 mm in a homogeneous background were defined. Phantom entrance surface air kerma (Ka,e) was measured with an ionisation chamber.ResultsThe visibility of a low-contrast vessel in DSA images has been identified with a CNR value of 0.50 ± 0.03. Despite using 14 times more Ka,e (8.85 vs 0.63 mGy/image), the protocol for large patients showed a decrease in the overall score CNRsum of 67% (4.21 ± 0.06 vs 2.10 ± 0.05). The uncertainty in the results of the objective method was below 5%.ConclusionObjective evaluation of DSA images using CNR is feasible with dedicated phantom measurements. An objective methodology has been suggested for acceptance tests compliant with the IEC/DIN standards. The defined overall scores can serve to fix a reproducible baseline for constancy tests, as well as to study the device stability within one acquisition series and compare different imaging protocols. This work provides aspects that have not been included in the recent European guidelines on Criteria for Acceptability of Medical Radiological Equipment.  相似文献   

11.
PurposeTo calculate organ doses and estimate the effective dose for justification purposes in patients undergoing orthognathic treatment planning purposes and temporal bone imaging in dental cone beam CT (CBCT) and Multidetector CT (MDCT) scanners.MethodsThe radiation dose to the ICRP reference male voxel phantom was calculated for dedicated orthognathic treatment planning acquisitions via Monte Carlo simulations in two dental CBCT scanners, Promax 3D Max (Planmeca, FI) and NewTom VGi evo (QR s.r.l, IT) and in Somatom Definition Flash (Siemens, DE) MDCT scanner. For temporal bone imaging, radiation doses were calculated via MC simulations for a CBCT protocol in NewTom 5G (QR s.r.l, IT) and with the use of a software tool (CT-expo) for Somatom Force (Siemens, DE). All procedures had been optimized at the acceptance tests of the devices.ResultsFor orthognathic protocols, dental CBCT scanners deliver lower doses compared to MDCT scanners. The estimated effective dose (ED) was 0.32 mSv for a normal resolution operation mode in Promax 3D Max, 0.27 mSv in VGi-evo and 1.18 mSv in the Somatom Definition Flash. For temporal bone protocols, the Somatom Force resulted in an estimated ED of 0.28 mSv while for NewTom 5G the ED was 0.31 and 0.22 mSv for monolateral and bilateral imaging respectively.ConclusionsTwo clinical exams which are carried out with both a CBCT or a MDCT scanner were compared in terms of radiation dose. Dental CBCT scanners deliver lower doses for orthognathic patients whereas for temporal bone procedures the doses were similar.  相似文献   

12.
PurposeThe aim of this work was to introduce a new algorithm for image reconstruction in bone SPECT and to compare its performances with a commercially available standard OSEM and resolution recovery (RR) reconstruction.Materials and methodsThe algorithm was built applying the Lucy-Richardson deconvolution adn logarithmic image processing to the projections. A modification of the coefficients of wavelet decomposition was used to suppress the noise. The comparison with vendor software was performed both in a phantom study, using Signal-to-Noise ratio (SNR), Signal-to-Background ratio (SBR), spatial resolution and in clinical studies, by visual assessment of changes in contrast, spatial resolution and lesion detectability.ResultsA change in the SNR (from −4 to 40%), an increase in the SBR (from 19 to 40%), a minor improvement in spatial resolution and a similar noise level were observed in the phantom study in comparison to the standard OSEM. A decrease in the SNR, a worse spatial resolution, but only a 3 to 13 % lower SBR were achieved in comparison with the vendor supplied RR algorithm. The proposed algorithm creates patient images with better contrast and lesion detectability compared to clinically used OSEM. Compared to RR, more than half of obtained images showed better contrast and nearly half of them have better lesion detectability.ConclusionThe proposed algorithm compares favorably with the standard OSEM. Although less favorable, the comparison with RR and noise suppression algorithms, suggests that it can be used with only a slight decrease in the SBR.  相似文献   

13.
PurposeTo investigate the potential of dual energy CT (DECT) to suppress metal artifacts and accurately depict episcleral brachytherapy Ru-106 plaques after surgical placement.MethodsAn anthropomorphic phantom simulating the adult head after surgical placement of a Ru-106 plaque was employed. Nine DECT acquisition protocols for orbital imaging were applied. Monochromatic 140 keV images were generated using iterative reconstruction and an available metal artifact reduction algorithm. Generated image datasets were graded by four observers regarding the ability to accurate demarcate the Ru-106 plaque. Objective image quality and visual grading analysis (VGA) was performed to compare different acquisition protocols. The DECT imaging protocol which allowed accurate plaque demarcation at minimum exposure was identified. The eye-lens dose from orbital DECT, with and without the use of radioprotective bismuth eye-shields, was determined using Monte Carlo methods.ResultsAll DECT acquisition protocols were judged to allow clear demarcation of the plaque borders despite some moderate streaking/shading artifacts. The differences between mean observers’ VGA scores for the 9 DECT imaging protocols were not statistically significant (p > 0.05). The eye-lens dose from the proposed low-exposure DECT protocol was found to be 20.1 and 22.8 mGy for the treated and the healthy eye, respectively. Bismuth shielding was found to accomplish >40% reduction in eye-lens dose without inducing shielding-related artifacts that obscure plaque delineation.ConclusionsDECT imaging of orbits after Ru-106 plaque positioning for ocular brachytherapy was found to allow artifact-free delineation of plaque margins at relatively low patient exposure, providing the potential for post-surgery plaque position verification.  相似文献   

14.
PurposeThe purpose of this study was to quantify the effect that table height, patient size, and localizer acquisition order may have on AEC prescribed dose.Method and materialsThree phantoms were used for this study: the Mercury Phantom, acrylic sheets, and an anthropomorphic phantom. A lateral (LAT) and a posterior-anterior (PA) localizer was acquired for each phantom at different table heights on a MDCT scanner (GE Discovery CT750 HD). AEC scan acquisitions were prescribed for each combination of phantom, localizer orientation, and table height ±4 cm with the center position; the displayed CTDIvol was recorded. Based on the institutional dose monitoring program, the relationship between change in CTDIvol and change in table height were studied for LAT and AP localizers for clinical exams.ResultsFor all phantom scans based on the PA localizer, the percent change in ranged between −18% and 42% for table heights 4 cm below and above proper centering; while for the LAT localizer, the percent change in CTDIvol from ideal were no greater than 12% different for ±4 cm differences in table height. Change in CTDIvol and change in table height displayed a strong linear relationship for AP localizer exams (P = 0.002), and weak correlation for LAT localizer exams (P = 0.12).ConclusionsSince uncertainty in vertical patient positioning is inherently greater than lateral positioning, the LAT localizer should be utilized to precisely and reproducibly deliver the intended amount of radiation prescribed by CT protocols.  相似文献   

15.
PurposeTo define a method and investigate how the adjustment of scan parameters affected the image quality and Hounsfield units (HUs) on a CT scanner used for radiotherapy treatment planning. A lack of similar investigations in the literature may be a contributing factor in the apparent reluctance to optimise radiotherapy CT protocols.MethodA Catphan phantom was used to assess how image quality on a Toshiba Aquilion LB scanner changed with scan parameters. Acquisition and reconstruction field-of-view (FOV), collimation, image slice thickness, effective mAs per rotation and reconstruction algorithm were varied. Changes were assessed for HUs of different materials, high contrast spatial resolution (HCSR), contrast-noise ratio (CNR), HU uniformity, scan direction low contrast and CT dose-index.ResultsCNR and HCSR varied most with reconstruction algorithm, reconstruction FOV and effective mAs. Collimation, but not image slice width, had a significant effect on CT dose-index with narrower collimation giving higher doses. Dose increased with effective mAs. Highest HU differences were seen when changing reconstruction algorithm: 56 HU for densities close to water and 117 HU for bone-like materials. Acquisition FOV affected the HUs but reconstruction FOV and effective mAs did not.ConclusionsAll the scan parameters investigated affected the image quality metrics. Reconstruction algorithm, reconstruction FOV, collimation and effective mAs were most important. Reconstruction algorithm and acquisition FOV had significant effect on HU. The methodology is applicable to radiotherapy CT scanners when investigating image quality optimisation, prior to assessing the impact of scan protocol changes on clinical CT images and treatment plans.  相似文献   

16.
PurposeTo measure the combined errors due to geometric inaccuracy and image co-registration on secondary images (dynamic CT angiography (dCTA), 3D DynaCT angiography (DynaCTA), and magnetic resonance images (MRI)) that are routinely used to aid in target delineation and planning for stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS).MethodsThree phantoms (one commercial and two in-house built) and two different analysis approaches (commercial and MATLAB based) were used to quantify the magnitude of geometric image distortion and co-registration errors for different imaging modalities within CyberKnife’s MultiPlan treatment planning software. For each phantom, the combined errors were reported as a mean target registration error (TRE). The mean TRE’s for different intramodality imaging parameters (e.g., mAs, kVp, and phantom set-ups) and for dCTA, DynaCTA, and MRI systems were measured.ResultsOnly X-ray based imaging can be performed with the commercial phantom, and the mean TRE ± standard deviation values were large compared to the in-house analysis using MATLAB. With the 3D printed phantom, even drastic changes in treatment planning CT imaging protocols did not greatly influence the mean TRE (<0.5 mm for a 1 mm slice thickness CT). For all imaging modalities, the largest mean TRE was found on DynaCT, followed by T2-weighted MR images (albeit all <1 mm).ConclusionsThe user may overestimate the mean TRE if the commercial phantom and MultiPlan were used solely. The 3D printed phantom design is a sensitive and suitable quality assurance tool for measuring 3D geometric inaccuracy and co-registration errors across all imaging modalities.  相似文献   

17.
PurposeWe aimed to thoroughly characterize image quality of a novel deep learning image reconstruction (DLIR), and investigate its potential for dose reduction in abdominal CT in comparison with filtered back-projection (FBP) and a partial model-based iterative reconstruction (ASiR-V).MethodsWe scanned a phantom at three dose levels: regular (7 mGy), low (3 mGy) and ultra-low (1 mGy). Images were reconstructed using DLIR (low, medium and high levels) and ASiR-V (0% = FBP, 50% and 100%). Noise and contrast-dependent spatial resolution were characterized by computing noise power spectra and target transfer functions, respectively. Detectability indexes of simulated acute appendicitis or colonic diverticulitis (low contrast), and calcium-containing urinary stones (high contrast) (|ΔHU| = 50 and 500, respectively) were calculated using the nonprewhitening with eye filter model observer.ResultsAt all dose levels, increasing DLIR and ASiR-V levels both markedly decreased noise magnitude compared with FBP, with DLIR low and medium maintaining noise texture overall. For both low- and high-contrast spatial resolution, DLIR not only maintained, but even slightly enhanced spatial resolution in comparison with FBP across all dose levels. Conversely, increasing ASiR-V impaired low-contrast spatial resolution compared with FBP. Overall, DLIR outperformed ASiR-V in all simulated clinical scenarios. For both low- and high-contrast diagnostic tasks, increasing DLIR substantially enhanced detectability at any dose and contrast levels for any simulated lesion size.ConclusionsUnlike ASiR-V, DLIR substantially reduces noise while maintaining noise texture and slightly enhancing spatial resolution overall. DLIR outperforms ASiR-V by enabling higher detectability of both low- and high-contrast simulated abdominal lesions across all investigated dose levels.  相似文献   

18.

Background

The aims of this study were to investigate the image quality and radiation exposure of pediatric protocols for cardiac CT angiography (CTA) in infants under one year of age.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Cardiac CTA examinations were performed using an anthropomorphic phantom representing a 1-year-old child scanned with non-electrocardiogram-gated (NG), retrospectively electrocardiogram-gated helical (RGH) and prospectively electrocardiogram-gated axial (PGA) techniques in 64-slice and 256-slice CT scanners. The thermoluminescent dosimeters (TLD) were used for direct organ dose measurement, while dose-length product and effective mAs were also used to estimate the patient dose. For image quality, noise and signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) were assessed based on regions-of-interest drawn on the reconstructed CT images, and were compared with the proposed cardiac image quantum index (CIQI). Estimated dose results were in accordant to the measured doses. The NG scan showed the best image quality in terms of noise and SNR. The PGA scan had better image quality than the RGH scan with 83.70% dose reduction. Noise and SNR were also corresponded to the proposed CIQI.

Conclusions/Significance

The PGA scan protocol was a good choice in balancing radiation exposure and image quality for infant cardiac CTA. We also suggested that the effective mAs and the CIQI were suitable in assessing the tradeoffs between radiation dose and image quality for cardiac CTA in infants. These results are useful for future implementation of dose reduction strategies in pediatric cardiac CTA protocols.  相似文献   

19.
X-ray computed tomography (CT) images obtained with a kilo-voltage (kV) on-board imaging (OBI) system improve the accuracy of patient setup and treatment planning. The use of iterative reconstruction techniques (IRTs) for CT imaging can also reduce radiation dose compared to analytic reconstruction techniques. Despite these improvements, the image quality varies with IRTs, and the noise structure of reconstructed images can be distorted by IRTs. In this study, the noise properties and spatial resolution of the images reconstructed by IRTs were evaluated in terms of conventional noise metrics, high-order statistics, noise spectral density (NSD) and modulation transfer function (MTF) at different radiation doses. A kV OBI system mounted on a Varian Trilogy machine and a CATPHAN600 phantom were used to obtain projections, and the projections were reconstructed by Feldkamp (FDK), algebraic reconstruction technique (ART), maximum-likelihood expectation–maximization (MLEM) and total variation (TV) minimization algorithms. The reconstructed images were compared according to mean, standard deviation, skewness, kurtosis, NSD and MTF at different radiation doses. The results demonstrated that the noise properties and spatial resolution of reconstructed images depend on the type of IRT and the radiation dose. The noise structures are altered by IRTs and can be characterized by high-order statistics and NSD, as well as conventional noise metrics. In conclusion, high-order statistics and NSD should be considered in order to provide detailed information for the images reconstructed by IRTs. Also, trade-off among noise properties, spatial resolution and contrast is important to optimize image quality obtained using IRTs.  相似文献   

20.
PurposeTo assess the task-based performance of images obtained under different focal spot size and acquisition mode on a dual-energy CT scanner.MethodsAxial CT image series of the Catphan phantom were obtained using a tube focus at different sizes. Acquisitions were performed in standard single-energy, high resolution (HR) and dual-energy modes. Images were reconstructed using conventional and high definition (HD) kernels. Task-based transfer function at the 50% level (TTF50%) for teflon, delrin, low density polyethylene (LDPE) and acrylic, as well as image noise and noise texture, were assessed across all focal spots and acquisition modes using Noise Power Spectrum (NPS) analysis. A non-prewhitening mathematical observer model was used to calculate detectability index (dNPW).ResultsTTF50% degraded with increasing focal spot size. TTF50% ranged from 0.67 mm−1 for teflon to 0.25 mm−1 for acrylic. For standard kernel, image noise and NPS-determined average spatial frequency were 8.3 HU and 0.29 mm−1, respectively in single-energy, 12.0 HU and 0.37 mm−1 in HR, and 7.9 HU and 0.26 mm−1 in dual-energy mode. For standard kernel, dNPW was 61 in single-energy and HR mode and reduced to 56 in dual-energy mode.ConclusionsThe task-based image quality assessment metrics have shown that spatial resolution is higher for higher image contrast materials and detectability is higher in the standard single-energy mode compared to HR and dual-energy mode. The results of the current study provide CT operators the required knowledge to characterize their CT system towards the optimization of its clinical performance.  相似文献   

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