Abstract

BackgroundWe investigated the influence of dose, spectral separation, pitch, rotation time, and reconstruction kernel on accuracy and image noise of virtual non-calcium images using a bone marrow phantom.MethodsThe phantom was developed at our institution and scanned using a third-generation dual-source dual-energy CT scanner at five different spectral separations by varying the tube-voltage combinations (70 kV/Sn150 kV, 80 kV/Sn150 kV, 90 kV/Sn150 kV, and 100 kV/Sn150 kV, all with 0.6-mm tin filter [Sn]; 80 kV/140 kV without tin filter) at six different doses (volume computed tomography dose index from 1 to 80 mGy). In separate experiments, rotation times, pitch, and reconstruction kernels were varied at a constant dose and tube voltage. Accuracy was determined by measuring the mean error between virtual non-calcium values in the fluid within and outside of the bone. Image noise was defined as the standard deviation of virtual non-calcium values.ResultsSpectral separation, dose, rotation time, or pitch did not significantly correlate (p > 0.083) with mean error. Increased spectral separation (rs-0.96, p < 0.001) and increased dose (rs-0.98, p < 0.001) correlated significantly with decreased image noise. Increasing sharpness of the reconstruction kernel correlated with mean error (rs 0.83, p = 0.015) and image noise (rs 1.0, p < 0.001).ConclusionsIncreased dose and increased spectral separation significantly lowered image noise in virtual non-calcium images but did not affect the accuracy. Virtual non-calcium reconstructions with similar accuracy and image noise could be achieved at a lower tube-voltage difference by increasing the dose.

Highlights

  • We investigated the influence of dose, spectral separation, pitch, rotation time, and reconstruction kernel on accuracy and image noise of virtual non-calcium images using a bone marrow phantom

  • High spectral separation can reduce the dose at equal image noise in virtual non-calcium images

  • An increase in the sharpness of the reconstruction kernel was significantly correlated with image noise and mean error

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Summary

Introduction

We investigated the influence of dose, spectral separation, pitch, rotation time, and reconstruction kernel on accuracy and image noise of virtual non-calcium images using a bone marrow phantom. Virtual non-calcium (VNCa) images are created from DECT data by estimating the amount of bone mineral, primarily made up of calcium, and subtracting this from the original image. Müller et al European Radiology Experimental (2019) 3:46 associated with acute fractures [2, 5,6,7,8] Those studies used different DECT scan parameters, including tube-voltage combinations and doses, and virtual phantom studies have demonstrated that tube-voltage combinations and dose affect image noise in DECT scans [9]. While we know that tubevoltage combination and dose do affect image noise in VNCa images, we cannot compare the results between scans or studies, which have used different DECT scan parameters

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