Simultaneous high‐pitch multi‐energy CT pulmonary angiography using a dual‐source photon‐counting‐detector CT: A phantom experiment

Purpose A dual‐source CT system can be operated in a high‐pitch helical mode to provide a temporal resolution of 66 ms, which reduces motion artifacts in CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA). It can also be operated in a multi‐energy (ME) mode to provide iodine maps, beneficial in the evaluation of pulmo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied clinical medical physics 2024-11, Vol.25 (11), p.e14496-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Mihailovic, Jelena M., Bruesewitz, Michael R., Swicklik, Joseph R., Yalon, Mariana, Rajiah, Prabhakar S., Fletcher, Joel G., McCollough, Cynthia H., Yu, Lifeng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose A dual‐source CT system can be operated in a high‐pitch helical mode to provide a temporal resolution of 66 ms, which reduces motion artifacts in CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA). It can also be operated in a multi‐energy (ME) mode to provide iodine maps, beneficial in the evaluation of pulmonary embolism (PE). No energy‐integrating detector (EID) CT can perform simultaneous ME and high‐pitch acquisition. This phantom study aimed to evaluate the ability of a photon‐counting‐detector (PCD) CT to perform simultaneous high‐pitch and ME imaging for CTPA. Methods A motion phantom was used to mimic the respiratory motion. Two tubes filled with iodine with intravascular thrombus mimicked by injecting glue within the tubes were placed along with 5, 10, and 15 mg/mL iodine samples, on a motion phantom at 20 and 30 revolutions per minute. Separate high‐pitch and ME EID‐CT scans and a single high‐pitch ME PCD scan were acquired and virtual monoenergetic images and iodine maps reconstructed. Percent thrombus occlusion was measured and compared between static and moving images. Results When there was motion, EID‐CT ME suffered from significant motion artifacts. The measured iodine concentrations with PCD‐CT in high‐pitch ME were more stable when there was a motion, with a lower standard deviation than EID‐CT in ME mode. The estimated percent thrombus occlusion dropped significantly with applied motion on EID‐CT, while PCD‐CT high‐pitch ME mode showed good agreement between measurements on static or moving images. Conclusion PCD‐CT with combined ME and high‐pitch mode facilitates simultaneous accurate iodine quantification and assessment of intravascular occlusion.
ISSN:1526-9914
1526-9914
DOI:10.1002/acm2.14496