4.7 Article

Dedicated Cone-Beam CT System for Extremity Imaging

Journal

RADIOLOGY
Volume 270, Issue 3, Pages 816-824

Publisher

RADIOLOGICAL SOC NORTH AMERICA
DOI: 10.1148/radiol.13130225

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Carestream Health
  2. GE
  3. Vital
  4. Siemens
  5. Toshiba

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Purpose: To provide initial assessment of image quality and dose for a cone-beam computed tomographic (CT) scanner dedicated to extremity imaging. Materials and Methods: A prototype cone-beam CT scanner has been developed for imaging the extremities, including the weight-bearing lower extremities. Initial technical assessment included evaluation of radiation dose measured as a function of kilovolt peak and tube output (in milliampere seconds), contrast resolution assessed in terms of the signal difference- to- noise ratio (SDNR), spatial resolution semi-quantitatively assessed by using a line-pair module from a phantom, and qualitative evaluation of cadaver images for potential diagnostic value and image artifacts by an expert CT observer (musculoskeletal radiologist). Results: The dose for a nominal scan protocol (80 kVp, 108 mAs) was 9 mGy (absolute dose measured at the center of a CT dose index phantom). SDNR was maximized with the 80kVp scan technique, and contrast resolution was sufficient for visualization of muscle, fat, ligaments and/or tendons, cartilage joint space, and bone. Spatial resolution in the axial plane exceeded 15 line pairs per centimeter. Streaks associated with x-ray scatter (in thicker regions of the patient-eg, the knee), beam hardening (about cortical bone-eg, the femoral shaft), and cone-beam artifacts (at joint space surfaces oriented along the scanning plane-eg, the interphalangeal joints) presented a slight impediment to visualization. Cadaver images (elbow, hand, knee, and foot) demonstrated excellent visibility of bone detail and good soft-tissue visibility suitable to a broad spectrum of musculoskeletal indications. Conclusion: A dedicated extremity cone-beam CT scanner capable of imaging upper and lower extremities (including weight-bearing examinations) provides sufficient image quality and favorable dose characteristics to warrant further evaluation for clinical use. (C) RSNA, 2013

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