Literature DB >> 23298102

The effect of head size∕shape, miscentering, and bowtie filter on peak patient tissue doses from modern brain perfusion 256-slice CT: how can we minimize the risk for deterministic effects?

Kostas Perisinakis1, Ioannis Seimenis, Antonis Tzedakis, Antonios E Papadakis, John Damilakis.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine patient-specific absorbed peak doses to skin, eye lens, brain parenchyma, and cranial red bone marrow (RBM) of adult individuals subjected to low-dose brain perfusion CT studies on a 256-slice CT scanner, and investigate the effect of patient head size∕shape, head position during the examination and bowtie filter used on peak tissue doses.
METHODS: The peak doses to eye lens, skin, brain, and RBM were measured in 106 individual-specific adult head phantoms subjected to the standard low-dose brain perfusion CT on a 256-slice CT scanner using a novel Monte Carlo simulation software dedicated for patient CT dosimetry. Peak tissue doses were compared to corresponding thresholds for induction of cataract, erythema, cerebrovascular disease, and depression of hematopoiesis, respectively. The effects of patient head size∕shape, head position during acquisition and bowtie filter used on resulting peak patient tissue doses were investigated. The effect of eye-lens position in the scanned head region was also investigated. The effect of miscentering and use of narrow bowtie filter on image quality was assessed.
RESULTS: The mean peak doses to eye lens, skin, brain, and RBM were found to be 124, 120, 95, and 163 mGy, respectively. The effect of patient head size and shape on peak tissue doses was found to be minimal since maximum differences were less than 7%. Patient head miscentering and bowtie filter selection were found to have a considerable effect on peak tissue doses. The peak eye-lens dose saving achieved by elevating head by 4 cm with respect to isocenter and using a narrow wedge filter was found to approach 50%. When the eye lies outside of the primarily irradiated head region, the dose to eye lens was found to drop to less than 20% of the corresponding dose measured when the eye lens was located in the middle of the x-ray beam. Positioning head phantom off-isocenter by 4 cm and employing a narrow wedge filter results in a moderate reduction of signal-to-noise ratio mainly to the peripheral region of the phantom.
CONCLUSIONS: Despite typical peak doses to skin, eye lens, brain, and RBM from the standard low-dose brain perfusion 256-slice CT protocol are well below the corresponding thresholds for the induction of erythema, cataract, cerebrovascular disease, and depression of hematopoiesis, respectively, every effort should be made toward optimization of the procedure and minimization of dose received by these tissues. The current study provides evidence that the use of the narrower bowtie filter available may considerably reduce peak absorbed dose to all above radiosensitive tissues with minimal deterioration in image quality. Considerable reduction in peak eye-lens dose may also be achieved by positioning patient head center a few centimeters above isocenter during the exposure.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23298102     DOI: 10.1118/1.4773042

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  5 in total

1.  Dosimetric evaluation of a 256-slice computed tomography scanner.

Authors:  Anna Radice; Claudio Ielasi; Gabriele D'Andrea; Nicoletta Paruccini; Andrea Crespi
Journal:  Radiol Med       Date:  2014-03-21       Impact factor: 3.469

2.  Impact of bowtie filter and object position on the two-dimensional noise power spectrum of a clinical MDCT system.

Authors:  Daniel Gomez-Cardona; Juan Pablo Cruz-Bastida; Ke Li; Adam Budde; Jiang Hsieh; Guang-Hong Chen
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2016-08       Impact factor: 4.071

3.  Abdominal CT during pregnancy: a phantom study on the effect of patient centring on conceptus radiation dose and image quality.

Authors:  G Solomou; A E Papadakis; J Damilakis
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2014-11-28       Impact factor: 5.315

4.  Patient positioning during pediatric cardiothoracic computed tomography using a high-resilience pad system and pre-scan measurement of chest thickness.

Authors:  Satoshi Higuchi; Tatsuya Nishii; Atsushi Hirota; Shota Harumoto; Hiroki Horinouchi; Emi Tateishi; Yasutoshi Ohta; Keisuke Kiso; Kenichi Kurosaki; Tetsuya Fukuda
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-10-05       Impact factor: 4.996

5.  Accuracy of automated patient positioning in CT using a 3D camera for body contour detection.

Authors:  Ronald Booij; Ricardo P J Budde; Marcel L Dijkshoorn; Marcel van Straten
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2018-10-10       Impact factor: 5.315

  5 in total

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