Author:
Notohamiprodjo S.,Roeper K. M.,Treitl K. M.,Hoberg B.,Wanninger F.,Verstreepen L.,Mueck F. G.,Maxien D.,Fischer F.,Peschel O.,Wirth S.
Abstract
AbstractIn recent phantom studies low-contrast detectability was shown to be independent from variations in tube voltage in digital radiography (DR) systems. To investigate the transferability to a clinical setting, the lower extremities of human cadavers were exposed at constant detector doses with different tube voltages in a certain range, as proposed in the phantom studies. Three radiologists independently graded different aspects of image quality (IQ) in a comparative analysis. The grades show no correlation between IQ and kV, which means that the readers were not able to recognize a significant IQ difference at different kV. Signal-to-noise and contrast-to-noise ratios showed no significant differences in IQ despite the kV-setting variations. These findings were observed from a limited kV range setting. Higher kV-settings resulted in lowest patient exposure at constant IQ. These results confirm the potential of DR-systems to contribute to standardization of examination protocols comparable to computed tomography. This may prevent the trend to overexpose. Further investigations in other body regions and other DR-systems are encouraged to determine transferability.
Funder
Klinikum rechts der Isar der Technischen Universität München
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
2 articles.
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