Abstract

Patients who need torsion measurement of the lower limb often have metal implants hindering e.g. MRI. A new ultra-low-dose (ULD-)CT protocol might be feasible for torsion measurement at cost of relatively low radiation exposure. We retrospectively included all patients with clinically indicated torsion measurement in the period July 2019 to June 2021 and metal implants in the scanning field. The ULD-CT protocol comprised automated tube current time product and automated tube voltage with reference settings of 100kV/20mAs (hip), 80kV/20mAs (knee) and 80kV/10mAs (ankle). Femoral neck anteversion, tibial, intra-articular knee and overall leg torsion measurements were performed by two radiologists independently. Diagnostic confidence regarding the delineation of the relevant cortical bone was rated on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = non-diagnostic, 5 = excellent). 102 consecutive patients could be included (BMI 27.38 ± 5.85) with 154 metal implants. Median total dose length product of the ULD-CT-torsion measurement was 16.5mGycm [11-39]. Both readers showed high agreement with a maximum torsional difference of 4.1°. Diagnostic confidence was rated best (5/5) in 92.2% (reader 1) and 93.1% (reader 2) with a worst rating of 3/5. The new ULD-CT protocol is feasible for torsion measurement of the lower limb - even in patients with metal implants. Metal implants are not an obstacle for ULD-CT torsion measurements of the lower limb.

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