Feasibility of real time dual-energy imaging based on a flat panel detector for coronary artery calcium quantification
The feasibility of a real-time dual-energy imaging technique with dynamic filtration using a flat panel detector for quantifying coronary arterial calcium was evaluated. In this technique, the x-ray beam was switched at 15 Hz between 60 kVp and 120 kVp with the 120 kVp beam having an additional 0.8...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Medical physics (Lancaster) 2006-06, Vol.33 (6), p.1612-1622 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The feasibility of a real-time dual-energy imaging technique with dynamic filtration using a flat panel detector for quantifying coronary arterial calcium was evaluated. In this technique, the x-ray beam was switched at
15
Hz
between
60
kVp
and
120
kVp
with the
120
kVp
beam having an additional
0.8
mm
silver filter. The performance of the dynamic filtration technique was compared with a static filtration technique (
4
mm
Al
+
0.2
mm
Cu for both beams). The ability to quantify calcium mass was evaluated using calcified arterial vessel phantoms with
20
–
230
mg
of hydroxylapatite. The vessel phantoms were imaged over a Lucite phantom and then an anthropomorphic chest phantom. The total thickness of Lucite phantom ranges from
13.5
–
26.5
cm
to simulate patient thickness of
16
–
32
cm
. The calcium mass was measured using a densitometric technique. The effective dose to patient was estimated from the measured entrance exposure. The effects of patient thickness on contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), effective dose, and the precision of calcium mass quantification (i.e., the frame to frame variability) were studied. The effects of misregistration artifacts were also measured by shifting the vessel phantoms manually between low- and high-energy images. The results show that, with the same detector signal level, the dynamic filtration technique produced 70% higher calcium contrast-to-noise ratio with only 4% increase in patient dose as compared to the static filtration technique. At the same time, x-ray tube loading increased by 30% with dynamic filtration. The minimum detectability of calcium with anatomical background was measured to be
34
mg
of hydroxyapatite. The precision in calcium mass measurement, determined from 16 repeated dual-energy images, ranges from
13
mg
to
41
mg
when the patient thickness increased from
16
to
32
cm
. The CNR was found to decrease with the patient thickness linearly at a rate of
(
−
7
%
∕
cm
)
. The anatomic background produced measurement root-mean-square (RMS) errors of
13
mg
and
18
mg
when the vessel phantoms were imaged over a uniform (over the rib) and nonuniform (across the edge of rib) bone background, respectively. Misregistration artifacts due to motions of up to
1.0
mm
between the low- and high-energy images introduce RMS error of less than
4.3
mg
, which is much smaller than the frame to frame variability and the measurement error due to anatomic background. The effective dose ranged from
1.1
to
6.6
μ
Sv
for each dual-energy |
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ISSN: | 0094-2405 2473-4209 |
DOI: | 10.1118/1.2198942 |