Image quality of thickened slabs in multislice CT chest examinations:: Postprocessing vs. direct reconstruction

被引:3
|
作者
Wedegaertner, U.
Yamamura, J.
Nagel, H.-D.
Aldefeld, D.
Brinkmann, C.
Popovych, S.
Buchert, R.
Weber, C.
Adam, G.
机构
[1] Univ Hamburg, Hosp Eppendorf, Klin & Poliklin Diagnost & Intervent Radiol, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany
[2] Univ Hamburg, Hosp Eppendorf, Nukl Med Klin & Poliklin, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany
关键词
technical aspects; thorax; CT spiral;
D O I
10.1055/s-2006-927196
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Purpose: Postprocessing offers the possibility of real-time creation of thickened slabs from a set of thin slices. This allows the interactive change from thick to thin slices for better evaluation of unclear lesions. As a result the clinical workflow of MSCT evaluation can be improved. However, to be able to apply this postprocessing software in the clinical routine, degradations in the image quality (compared to standard original reconstructed images) have to be avoided. The purpose of this study was to compare the image quality of thickened slabs from MSCT chest examinations that have either been directly reconstructed from the raw data or have been retrospectively generated via postprocessing. Materials and Methods: Chest MSCT examinations of 20 patients (mean age: 56 years) were performed on a 16-slice MSCT scanner (Mx8000IDT16, Philips, Best, Netherlands) using the following scan parameters: 120 kV, 94 effective mAs, 16 x 1.5 mm collimation, 512 x 512 matrix, field of view 371 x 371 mm, CTDI-vol = 6.3 mGy, DLP = 210 mGyxcm). Slices with a thickness of 3 and 5 mm were generated for each examination both directly from the raw data and via postprocessing. Corresponding images from postprocessing and direct reconstruction (lung/ soft tissue window) were evaluated by two radiologists with respect to 5 criteria on the basis of a five-point scale: organ structure, contour of small objects, contrast, image noise and artifacts. Differences between both data sets regarding image quality were assessed for each of the 5 criteria using a Wilcoxon test with Bonferroni correction. In addition, image noise was analyzed quantitatively in a region of interest in the aorta. Results: For the lung and soft tissue window, both reviewers and all criteria, no differences in image quality were detected between the thickened slices obtained via direct reconstruction and the postprocessing method. In 96% and 95% of the cases images of the two reconstruction methods were graded identically for 3 mm and 5 mm slices. In the remaining 4% and 5%, the evaluations differed only by one point on the five-point scale. The median grade of the first reviewer was 1 and that of the second reviewer was 2. There were no differences in the quantitative analysis of image noise between both methods. Conclusion: The interactive creation of thickened slices is an effective tool for the evaluation of MSCT examinations. For the defined scan parameters in this study there were no differences in image quality between postprocessing methods (e.g. slab viewer) and direct image reconstruction.
引用
收藏
页码:373 / 379
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Radiation exposure and image quality in chest CT examinations
    Ravenel, J
    Scalzetti, EM
    Huda, W
    Garrisi, W
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY, 2001, 177 (02) : 279 - 284
  • [2] Improved image quality of low-dose thoracic CT examinations with a new postprocessing software
    Martinsen, Anne Catrine Traegde
    Saether, Hilde Kjernlie
    Olsen, Dag Rune
    Wolff, Per Aage
    Skaane, Per
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED CLINICAL MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2010, 11 (03): : 250 - 258
  • [3] CT vs. VolumeScope: image quality and dose comparison
    Vasiliev, VN
    Gamaliy, AF
    Zaytsev, MY
    Zaytseva, KV
    X-Ray and Neutron Capillary Optics II, 2005, 5943 : 248 - 254
  • [4] Chest computed tomography using iterative reconstruction vs filtered back projection (Part 2): image quality of low-dose CT examinations in 80 patients
    Pontana, Francois
    Duhamel, Alain
    Pagniez, Julien
    Flohr, Thomas
    Faivre, Jean-Baptiste
    Hachulla, Anne-Lise
    Remy, Jacques
    Remy-Jardin, Martine
    EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY, 2011, 21 (03) : 636 - 643
  • [5] Chest computed tomography using iterative reconstruction vs filtered back projection (Part 2): image quality of low-dose CT examinations in 80 patients
    François Pontana
    Alain Duhamel
    Julien Pagniez
    Thomas Flohr
    Jean-Baptiste Faivre
    Anne-Lise Hachulla
    Jacques Remy
    Martine Remy-Jardin
    European Radiology, 2011, 21 : 636 - 643
  • [6] Assessment of organ dose and image quality in head and chest CT examinations: a phantom study
    Gharbi, S.
    Labidi, S.
    Mars, M.
    Chelli, M.
    Meftah, S.
    Ladeb, M. F.
    JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION, 2018, 38 (02) : 807 - 818
  • [7] Image quality and dose evaluation in spiral chest CT examinations of patients with lung carcinoma
    Morán, LM
    Rodríguez, R
    Calzado, A
    Turrero, A
    Arenas, A
    Cuevas, A
    García-Castaño, B
    Gómez, N
    Morán, P
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY, 2004, 77 (922): : 839 - 846
  • [8] Evaluation of deep-learning image reconstruction for chest CT examinations at two different dose levels
    Svalkvist, Angelica
    Fagman, Erika
    Vikgren, Jenny
    Ku, Sara
    Diniz, Micael Oliveira
    Norrlund, Rauni Rossi
    Johnsson, Ase A.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED CLINICAL MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2023, 24 (03):
  • [9] Image quality assessment of pediatric chest and abdomen CT by deep learning reconstruction
    Haesung Yoon
    Jisoo Kim
    Hyun Ji Lim
    Mi-Jung Lee
    BMC Medical Imaging, 21
  • [10] Image quality assessment of pediatric chest and abdomen CT by deep learning reconstruction
    Yoon, Haesung
    Kim, Jisoo
    Lim, Hyun Ji
    Lee, Mi-Jung
    BMC MEDICAL IMAGING, 2021, 21 (01)