Kaup Moritz, Gruber-Rouh Tatjana, Scholtz Jan E, Albrecht Moritz H, Bucher Andreas, Frellesen Claudia, Vogl Thomas J, Beeres Martin
Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, Clinic of the Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany.
Acta Radiol Open. 2016 Dec 1;5(12):2058460116684371. doi: 10.1177/2058460116684371. eCollection 2016 Dec.
Computed tomography (CT) low-dose (LD) imaging is used to lower radiation exposure, especially in vascular imaging; in current literature, this is mostly on latest generation high-end CT systems.
To evaluate the effects of reduced tube current on objective and subjective image quality of a 15-year-old 16-slice CT system for pulmonary angiography (CTPA).
CTPA scans from 60 prospectively randomized patients (28 men, 32 women) were examined in this study on a 15-year-old 16-slice CT scanner system. Standard CT (SD) settings were 100 kV and 150 mAs, LD settings were 100 kV and 50 mAs. Attenuation of the pulmonary trunk, various anatomic landmarks, and image noise were quantitatively measured; contrast-to-noise ratios (CNR) and signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) were calculated. Three independent blinded radiologists subjectively rated each image series using a 5-point grading scale.
CT dose index (CTDI) in the LD series was 66.46% lower compared to the SD settings (2.49 ± 0.55 mGy versus 7.42 ± 1.17 mGy). Attenuation of the pulmonary trunk showed similar results for both series (SD 409.55 ± 91.04 HU; LD 380.43 HU ± 93.11 HU; = 0.768). Subjective image analysis showed no significant differences between SD and LD settings regarding the suitability for detection of central and peripheral PE (central SD/LD, 4.88; intra-class correlation coefficients [ICC], 0.894/4.83; ICC, 0.745; peripheral SD/LD, 4.70; ICC, 0.943/4.57; ICC, 0.919; all > 0.4).
The LD protocol, on a 15-year-old CT scanner system without current high-end hardware or post-processing tools, led to a dose reduction of approximately 67% with similar subjective image quality and delineation of central and peripheral pulmonary arteries.
计算机断层扫描(CT)低剂量(LD)成像用于降低辐射暴露,尤其是在血管成像中;在当前文献中,这大多是在最新一代高端CT系统上进行的。
评估降低管电流对一台使用了15年的16层CT系统进行肺血管造影(CTPA)时的客观和主观图像质量的影响。
本研究在一台使用了15年的16层CT扫描系统上,对60例前瞻性随机分组患者(28例男性,32例女性)的CTPA扫描进行了检查。标准CT(SD)设置为100 kV和150 mAs,LD设置为100 kV和50 mAs。对肺动脉主干、各种解剖标志的衰减以及图像噪声进行了定量测量;计算了对比噪声比(CNR)和信噪比(SNR)。三名独立的盲法放射科医生使用5分制分级量表对每个图像系列进行主观评分。
与SD设置相比,LD系列的CT剂量指数(CTDI)降低了66.46%(2.49±0.55 mGy对7.42±1.17 mGy)。两个系列中肺动脉主干的衰减结果相似(SD 409.55±91.04 HU;LD 380.43 HU±93.11 HU;P = 0.768)。主观图像分析显示,在检测中央和外周肺栓塞的适用性方面,SD和LD设置之间没有显著差异(中央SD/LD,4.88;组内相关系数[ICC],0.894/4.83;ICC,0.745;外周SD/LD,4.70;ICC,0.943/4.57;ICC,0.919;所有P>0.4)。
在一台没有当前高端硬件或后处理工具的使用了15年的CT扫描系统上,LD方案使剂量降低了约67%,同时主观图像质量以及中央和外周肺动脉的显示情况相似。