Abstract

This study is to investigate the computed tomography (CT) image quality of the low- tube-voltage protocol with low contrast agent dose.CT portography was performed in 118 cirrhosis patients with body mass index (BMI) less than 25 kg/m2 under 2 protocols: Protocol A, tube voltage of 90 kVp/395 mAs and contrast agent dosage of 1.2 mL/kg, and, Protocol B, tube voltage of 120 kVp/200 mAs and contrast agent dosage of 1.5 mL/kg.The number of patients in each protocol was 59. The CT value noise, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) in portal veins was comparatively analyzed between the 2 protocols. The subjective image quality was further assessed on 5-point scales. Radiation dose was also recorded and statistical analysis was performed.The CT value, CNR, and SNR of the images were higher at 90 kVp than those at 120 kVp (P < .05). There was no significant difference in image noise between the 2 protocols (P > .05). The CT dose index volume, dose-length product, and effective dose at 90 kVp were 18.2%, 16.0%, and 16.0% less than that at 120 kVp, respectively. There was no difference in image quality score between the 2 protocols (P > .05). The average amount of contrast agent was decreased by 17.8% when the 90 kVp protocol was used.CT portography at 90 kVp combined with low-dosage contrast agent leads to a significant reduction in radiation dose and improved SNR and CNR, without deterioration of image quality.

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