Abstract

For decades, dual-energy imaging has been used for tissue differentiation with several x-ray–based imaging modalities, exploiting the fact that the tissues in the human body show different absorption characteristics when penetrated with different x-ray spectra, spectra that are typically generated by different kV settings of the x-ray tube. Recently, dual-source computed tomography (CT) with 2 x-ray tubes and 2 detector arrays mounted in the same gantry has become available.1 After experience with earlier experimental prototypes, this dual-source CT for the first time enables the clinical acquisition of dual-energy CT studies simultaneously with a single scan. We used a dual-source CT scanner (Definition, Siemens, Forchheim, Germany) in dual-energy mode for performing coronary CT angiography in a 74-year–old woman with suspected coronary artery disease and prior abnormal nuclear rest/stress single-photon emission CT (SPECT). The CT scan was acquired with retrospective ECG-gating and the following scan parameters: 330-ms gantry rotation, pitch 0.2, and 32×2×0.6-mm …

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