Mayo John R, Kim Kun-Il, MacDonald Sharyn L S, Johkoh Takeshi, Kavanagh Peter, Coxson Harvey O, Vedal Sverre
Department of Radiology, Vancouver General Hospital, University of British Columbia, 899 W 12th Ave, Vancouver, BC, Canada V5Z 1M9.
Radiology. 2004 Sep;232(3):749-56. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2323030899. Epub 2004 Jul 29.
To assess, by using computer simulation, the effect of the use of reduced computed tomographic (CT) tube current on reader evaluation of structures and lung findings on images obtained at clinically indicated chest CT examinations.
The noise level in the raw scan data of 150 clinically indicated conventional tube current (200-320-mA) chest CT examinations was modified to simulate tube current reduction to 100 and to 40 mA. A total of 450 image sets were thus available. Four radiologists blinded to the tube current used assessed the image sets in random order for 14 structures and lung findings and ranked subjective image quality by using a five-point scale (1 = nondiagnostic, 2 = inferior, 3 = adequate, 4 = good, 5 = excellent). After a 3-week interval, the 150 conventional tube current image sets were rescored so that intraobserver agreement could be assessed. The McNemar statistic was used to determine whether there were more scoring disagreements between interpretations of the conventional and those of the reduced tube current scans or between the two interpretations of the conventional tube current scans.
When overall agreement for 14 structures and lung findings was pooled over four observers, significantly more disagreements (P <.05) were seen when scores were compared between conventional and reduced tube current scans than when scores were compared between repeated interpretations of the conventional tube current scans. There was a significant decrease (P <.05) in the subjective image quality of reduced tube current scans compared with the subjective image quality of conventional tube current scans.
These data indicate that reduced tube current does affect reader evaluation of structures and lung findings and reduces a reader's subjective assessment of image quality.
通过计算机模拟,评估在临床指征的胸部CT检查中,降低计算机断层扫描(CT)管电流对阅片者对图像上结构和肺部表现的评估的影响。
对150例临床指征的常规管电流(200 - 320 mA)胸部CT检查的原始扫描数据中的噪声水平进行修改,以模拟管电流降至100 mA和40 mA的情况。这样共得到450套图像集。四名对所用管电流不知情的放射科医生以随机顺序对这些图像集进行评估,以观察14种结构和肺部表现,并使用五点量表(1 = 无法诊断,2 = 较差,3 = 足够,4 = 良好,5 = 优秀)对主观图像质量进行评分。间隔3周后,对150套常规管电流图像集重新评分,以便评估观察者内一致性。使用McNemar统计量来确定在常规扫描与降低管电流扫描的解读之间,还是在常规管电流扫描的两次解读之间,是否存在更多的评分分歧。
当汇总四名观察者对14种结构和肺部表现的总体一致性时,与常规管电流扫描的重复解读之间的评分比较相比,常规扫描与降低管电流扫描之间的评分比较出现了更多显著的分歧(P <. = 05)。与常规管电流扫描的主观图像质量相比,降低管电流扫描的主观图像质量有显著下降(P <. = 05)。
这些数据表明,降低管电流确实会影响阅片者对结构和肺部表现的评估,并降低阅片者对图像质量的主观评价。