Dose reduction in CT examination of children by an attenuation-based on-line modulation of tube current (CARE Dose)

被引:0
|
作者
Holger Greess
Anton Nömayr
Heiko Wolf
Ulrich Baum
Michael Lell
Bernhard Böwing
Willi Kalender
Werner A. Bautz
机构
[1] Institute of Diagnostic Radiology,
[2] Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen–Nuremberg,undefined
[3] Maximiliansplatz 1,undefined
[4] 91054 Erlangen,undefined
[5] Germany,undefined
[6] Institute of Medical Physics,undefined
[7] Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen–Nuremberg,undefined
[8] Maximiliansplatz 1,undefined
[9] 91054 Erlangen,undefined
[10] Germany,undefined
[11] Siemens AG Medical Solution,undefined
[12] Forchheim,undefined
[13] Germany,undefined
来源
European Radiology | 2002年 / 12卷
关键词
Spiral CT mAs reduction Children Image quality Exposure to patients;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In a controlled patient study we investigated the potential of attenuation-based on-line modulation of the tube current to reduce milliampere values (mAs) in CT examinations of children without loss of image quality. mAs can be reduced for non-circular patient cross sections without an increase in noise if tube current is reduced at those angular positions where the patient diameter and, consequently, attenuation are small. We investigated a technical approach with an attenuation-based on-line control for the tube current realised as a work-in-progress implementation. The CT projection data are analysed in real time to determine optimal mAs values for each projection angle. We evaluated mAs reduction for 100 spiral CT examinations with attenuation-based on-line modulation of the tube current in a group of children. Two radiologists evaluated image quality by visual interpretation in consensus. We compared the mAs values read from the CT scanner with preset mAs of a standard protocol. Four different scan regions were examined in spiral technique (neck, thorax, abdomen, thorax and abdomen). We found the mAs product to be reduced typically by 10–60% depending on patient geometry and anatomical regions. The mean reduction was 22.3% (neck 20%, thorax 23%, abdomen 23%, thorax and abdomen 22%). In general, no deterioration of image quality was observed. There was no correlation between the age and the mean mAs reduction in the different anatomical regions. By classifying the children respectively to their weight, there is a positive trend between increasing weight and mAs reduction. We conclude that mAs in spiral CT examinations of children can be reduced substantially by attenuation-based on-line modulation of the tube current without deterioration of image quality. Attenuation-based on-line modulation of tube current is efficient and practical for reducing dose exposure to children.
引用
收藏
页码:1571 / 1576
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Generating Attenuation-Based Tube Current Modulation (TCM) Schema Based On Voxelized Patient Models to Be Used in Simulations Estimating Organ Dose From CT
    Angel, E.
    DeMarco, J.
    Cagnon, C.
    McNitt-Gray, M.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2009, 36 (06)
  • [22] Reducing CT Dose During Routine Brain CT Using Attenuation Based Tube Current Modulation (TCM)
    Angel, E.
    Zhang, D.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2012, 39 (06) : 3925 - 3925
  • [23] Use of tube current modulation to minimize radiation dose in CT-based PET attenuation correction
    Turkington, Timothy
    Lokitz, Stephen
    Colsher, James
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2011, 52
  • [24] Bismuth Shielding, Organ-based Tube Current Modulation, and Global Reduction of Tube Current for Dose Reduction to the Eye at Head CT
    Wang, Jia
    Duan, Xinhui
    Christner, Jodie A.
    Leng, Shuai
    Grant, Katharine L.
    McCollough, Cynthia H.
    RADIOLOGY, 2012, 262 (01) : 191 - 198
  • [25] Dose reduction in body CT examinations by anatomically adapted tube current modulation
    Bautz, WA
    Heim, I
    Wolf, H
    Kalender, WA
    RADIOLOGY, 1997, 205 : 1399 - 1399
  • [26] Effect of Automated Attenuation-based Tube Voltage Selection on Radiation Dose at CT: An Observational Study on a Global Scale
    Spearman, James V.
    Schoepf, U. Joseph
    Rottenkolber, Marietta
    Driesser, Ivo
    Canstein, Christian
    Thierfelder, Kolja M.
    Krazinski, Aleksander W.
    De Cecco, Carlo N.
    Meinel, Felix G.
    RADIOLOGY, 2016, 279 (01) : 167 - 174
  • [27] Eye Lens Dose Reduction From CT Scan Using Organ Based Tube Current Modulation
    Liu, H.
    Liu, T.
    Xu, X.
    Wu, J.
    Zhuo, W.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2015, 42 (06) : 3250 - 3250
  • [28] Dose reduction in subsecond multi-slice spiral CT examinations of children by online tube current modulation
    Greess, H
    Baum, U
    Wolf, H
    Suess, C
    Kalender, WA
    Bautz, WA
    RADIOLOGY, 2001, 221 : 246 - 246
  • [29] Effect of tube current modulation for dose estimation using a simulation tool on body CT examination
    Kawaguchi, Ai
    Matsunaga, Yuta
    Kobayashi, Masanao
    Suzuki, Shoichi
    Matsubara, Kosuke
    Chida, Koichi
    RADIATION PROTECTION DOSIMETRY, 2015, 167 (04) : 562 - 568
  • [30] Evaluation of automated attenuation-based tube potential selection in combination with organ-specific dose reduction for contrast-enhanced chest CT examinations
    Schimmoeller, L.
    Lanzman, R. S.
    Dietrich, S.
    Boos, J.
    Heusch, P.
    Miese, F.
    Antoch, G.
    Kroepil, P.
    CLINICAL RADIOLOGY, 2014, 69 (07) : 721 - 726