Abstract

To determine in a cadaveric study the lowest achievable radiation dose and optimal tube potential generating diagnostic image quality in multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) arthrography of the shoulder. Six shoulders from three human cadavers were scanned using a 256-MDCT system after intra-articular injection of diluted iodinated contrast material. Using six decreasing radiation dose levels (CTDIvol: 20, 15, 10, 8, 6, and 4mGy) and for each dose level, four decreasing tube potentials (140, 120, 100, and 80kVp), image noise and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) were measured. Two independent and blinded observers assessed the overall diagnostic image quality, subjective amount of noise, and severity of artifacts according to a four-point scale. Influence of those MDCT data acquisition parameters on objective and subjective image quality was analyzed using the Kruskal-Wallis and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests, and pairwise comparisons were performed. Multidetector CT protocols with radiation doses of 15mGy or higher, combined with tube potentials of 100kVp or higher, were equivalent in CNR to the reference 20mGy-140kVp protocol (all p ≥ 0.054). Above a CTDIvol of 10mGy and a tube potential of 120kVp, all protocols generated diagnostic image quality and subjective noise equivalent to the 20mGy-140kVp protocol (all p ≥ 0.22). Diagnostic image quality in MDCT arthrography of the shoulder can be obtained with a radiation dose of 10mGy at an optimal tube potential of 120kVp, corresponding to a reduction of up to 50% compared with standard-dose protocols, and as high as 500% compared with reported protocols in the literature.

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