Peng Yun, Li Jianying, Ma Daqing, Zhang Qifeng, Liu Yue, Zeng Jinjin, Sun Guoqiang
Imaging Center, Beijing Children's Hospital Affiliated to Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.
Acta Radiol. 2009 Dec;50(10):1175-81. doi: 10.3109/02841850903241914.
The automatic tube current modulation (ATCM) technique is available on multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) scanners, and its dose reduction benefits in clinical applications have been documented primarily in adult patients.
To evaluate the use of ATCM to reduce radiation dose while maintaining consistent image quality for young children undergoing 64-slice MDCT chest scans.
Chest scans (120 kV, small-scan field of view, 5-mm image slice thickness) were performed for 50 consecutive young children (0.2-3 years) using 64-slice volume computed tomography (VCT) with ATCM method and a noise index (NI) of either 8 or 9, depending on the patient's age. The scanner automatically selected the actual tube current based on NI values and patient attenuation as determined by scout scans for the study group. Image quality and volume-weighted CT dose index (CTDI(vol)) values (measured with small-scan field of view and 16-cm diameter CTDI phantom) were compared with images from a control group of 50 children acquired earlier using a standard protocol with fixed tube current. Two experienced pediatric radiologists assessed image quality, including resolution, noise, and artifacts, on a five-point scale. Scores greater than or equal to 3 were considered to be clinically acceptable.
The mean image quality score and CTDI(vol) for the study and control groups were 3.46 and 2.34+/-0.71 mGy, and 4.65 and 6.68+/-0.62 mGy, respectively. While there was a statistically significant decrease in image quality in the study group, all studies had acceptable image quality, and CTDI(vol) with ATCM was about 65% lower than that with fixed tube current. The average image noise for the control group was 4.78+/-0.58, versus 7.53+/-0.42 and 8.28+/-0.40 for children under and above 1 year of age, respectively, in the study group. Despite a higher average noise level, the study group with ATCM demonstrated a lower standard deviation of image noise.
The z-axis ATCM method produces consistent image quality for young children undergoing 64-slice MDCT chest scans. With noise levels of NI=8 and 9 at 5-mm image slice thickness, one may obtain clinically acceptable images with significantly reduced radiation dose.
自动管电流调制(ATCM)技术可用于多排螺旋计算机断层扫描(MDCT)扫描仪,其在临床应用中的剂量降低益处主要在成年患者中得到记录。
评估在64排MDCT胸部扫描中使用ATCM在保持图像质量一致的同时降低年幼儿童辐射剂量的效果。
使用64排容积计算机断层扫描(VCT)的ATCM方法,根据患者年龄,噪声指数(NI)为8或9,对50名连续的年幼儿童(0.2 - 3岁)进行胸部扫描(120 kV,小扫描视野,5 mm图像层厚)。对于研究组,扫描仪根据NI值和由定位扫描确定的患者衰减自动选择实际管电流。将图像质量和容积加权CT剂量指数(CTDI(vol))值(用小扫描视野和16 cm直径CTDI体模测量)与50名儿童对照组早期使用固定管电流的标准方案获取的图像进行比较。两名经验丰富的儿科放射科医生用五分制评估图像质量,包括分辨率、噪声和伪影。得分大于或等于3被认为临床可接受。
研究组和对照组的平均图像质量得分及CTDI(vol)分别为3.46和2.34±0.71 mGy,以及4.65和6.68±0.62 mGy。虽然研究组图像质量有统计学显著下降,但所有研究的图像质量均可接受,且ATCM的CTDI(vol)比固定管电流时低约65%。对照组的平均图像噪声为4.78±0.58,而研究组1岁以下和1岁以上儿童的平均图像噪声分别为7.53±0.42和8.28±0.40。尽管平均噪声水平较高,但采用ATCM的研究组图像噪声的标准差较低。
z轴ATCM方法为接受64排MDCT胸部扫描的年幼儿童提供了一致的图像质量。在5 mm图像层厚、NI = 8和9的噪声水平下,可以获得辐射剂量显著降低且临床可接受的图像。