Abstract

The purpose of this study was to quantify the reduction in radiation dose achievable by using the optimal z-axis coverage in coronary computed tomography (CT) angiography (CCTA) on a latest-generation 256-slice scanner. A total of 408 scans were reviewed that were performed on a wide-range detector scanner allowing up to 16-cm z-axis coverage (adjustable in 2-cm increments). For each CCTA study, we assessed the radiation dose (ie, dose-length product and volume CT dose index) and measured the minimum z-axis coverage necessary to cover the complete cardiac anatomy. We calculated the potential radiation dose savings achievable through reduction of the z-axis coverage to the minimum necessary. The majority of the CCTA scans were performed with a z-axis coverage of 16 cm (n = 285, 69.9%), followed by 14 cm (n = 121, 29.7%) and 12 cm (n = 2, 0.5%). In the group that was scanned with a collimation of 16 cm, radiation dose could have been reduced by 12.5% in 55 patients, 25% in 195 patients, and 37.5% in 33 patients when using optimal z-axis coverage for CCTA. In the group that was scanned with a collimation of 14 cm, radiation dose could have been reduced by 14.3% in 90 patients, and 28.6% in 30 patients, whereas in the group that was scanned with a collimation of 12 cm, dose could have been reduced by 16.7% in 2 patients. Using correct z-axis coverage in CCTA on a latest-generation 256-slice scanner yields average dose reductions of 22.0% but may be as high as 37.5%.

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