Abstract
PurposeLeg torsion analysis can provide valuable information in symptomatic patients after total knee arthroplasty. However, extensive beam-hardening and photon-starvation artifacts limit diagnostic assessability and dose reduction potential. For this study, we investigated the reproducibility of rotational measurements in ultra-low-dose photon-counting CT with spectral shaping via tin prefiltration. Material and methodsEmploying a first-generation photon-counting CT, eight cadaveric specimens were examined with an established three-level scan protocol (hip: Sn 140, knee: Sn 100, ankle: Sn 100 kVp). In three body donors with unilateral knee endoprostheses, additional modified settings were applied (Sn 140 kVp at knee level). Protocols were executed with three dose levels (hip–knee–ankle, high-quality: 5.0–3.0–2.0 mGy, low-dose: 0.80–0.30–0.26 mGy, ultra-low-dose: 0.25–0.06–0.06 mGy). Six radiologists performed torsion analyses, additionally reporting their diagnostic confidence. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) were calculated to assess interrater reliability. ResultsNo significant differences were ascertained for femoral (p = 0.330), tibial (p = 0.177), and overall leg rotation measurements (p = 0.358) among high-quality, low-dose, and ultra-low-dose protocols. Interrater reliability was excellent for torsion of the femur (ICC 0.915, 95% confidence interval 0.871–0.947), tibia (0.960, 0.938–0.976), and overall leg (0.967, 0.945–0.981). In specimens with total knee endoprostheses, absolute rotational measurements were unaffected by dose level and tube voltage despite superior diagnostic confidence on the ipsilateral and contralateral sides with modified settings (p < 0.001). ConclusionsCombining the advantages of photon-counting CT and spectral shaping, reliable leg torsion analyses are feasible with ultra-low radiation exposure even in the presence of total knee endoprostheses.
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