Gkanatsios Nikolaos A, Huda Walter, Peters Keith R
Department of Radiology, University of Florida, Gainesville 32610, USA.
Med Phys. 2002 Aug;29(8):1643-50. doi: 10.1118/1.1493213.
We investigated how varying the x-ray tube voltage and image receptor input exposure affected image quality and patient radiation doses in interventional neuroradiologic imaging. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) images were obtained of a phantom with 1 mm diameter vessels containing iodine at concentrations between 4.5 and 50 mg/cc. The detection threshold concentration of iodine was determined by inspecting DSA images obtained at a range of x-ray tube voltages and input exposure levels. Surface doses were obtained from measured x-ray tube output data, and corresponding values of energy imparted were determined using the exposure-area product incident on the phantom. In one series of experiments, the air kerma at the image intensifier (X) was varied between 0.44 microGy per frame and 8.8 microGy per frame at a constant x-ray tube voltage of 70 kVp. In a second series of experiments, the tube voltage was varied between 50 and 100 kVp, and the mAs adjusted to maintain a constant exposure level at the input of the image intensifier. At a constant x-ray tube voltage, the surface dose and energy imparted were directly proportional to the input exposure per frame used to acquire the DSA images. On our DSA system operated below 2.2 microGy per frame, the threshold iodine concentration was found to be proportional to X(-0.57), which is in reasonable agreement with the theoretical prediction for a quantum noise limited imaging system. Above 2.2 microGy per frame, however, the threshold iodine concentration was proportional to X(-0.26), indicating that increasing the input exposure above this value will only achieve modest improvements in image quality. At a constant image intensifier input exposure level, increasing the x-ray tube voltage from 50 kVp to 100 kVp reduced the surface dose by a factor of 6.1, and the energy imparted by a factor of 3.5. The detection threshold iodine concentration was found to be proportional to kVp(n), where n was 2.1 at 1.1 microGy per frame, and 1.6 at 3.9 microGy per frame. For clinical situations that can be modeled by a uniform phantom, reducing the x-ray tube voltage rather than increasing the exposure level would best achieve improvements on our DSA imaging system performance.
我们研究了在介入神经放射成像中,改变X射线管电压和图像接收器输入曝光量如何影响图像质量和患者辐射剂量。对含有直径1毫米血管、碘浓度在4.5至50毫克/立方厘米之间的模型进行数字减影血管造影(DSA)成像。通过检查在一系列X射线管电压和输入曝光水平下获得的DSA图像,确定碘的检测阈值浓度。表面剂量由测量的X射线管输出数据获得,并使用入射到模型上的曝光面积乘积确定相应的能量传递值。在一系列实验中,在70 kVp的恒定X射线管电压下,图像增强器处的空气比释动能在每帧0.44微戈瑞至8.8微戈瑞之间变化。在另一系列实验中,管电压在50至100 kVp之间变化,并调整毫安秒以在图像增强器输入端保持恒定的曝光水平。在恒定的X射线管电压下,表面剂量和能量传递与用于获取DSA图像的每帧输入曝光量成正比。在我们的DSA系统中,当每帧操作低于2.2微戈瑞时,发现阈值碘浓度与X(-0.57)成正比,这与量子噪声限制成像系统的理论预测合理一致。然而,当每帧高于2.2微戈瑞时,阈值碘浓度与X(-0.26)成正比,这表明将输入曝光增加到该值以上只会在图像质量上实现适度改善。在图像增强器输入曝光水平恒定的情况下,将X射线管电压从50 kVp增加到100 kVp,表面剂量降低了6.1倍,能量传递降低了3.5倍。发现检测阈值碘浓度与kVp(n)成正比,其中n在每帧1.1微戈瑞时为2.1,在每帧3.9微戈瑞时为1.6。对于可以用均匀模型模拟的临床情况,降低X射线管电压而非增加曝光水平将最能改善我们的DSA成像系统性能。