| Literature DB >> 26377427 |
Oscar Ardenfors1, Ulrika Svanholm2, Hans Jacobsson3, Patricia Sandqvist4, Per Grybäck5, Cathrine Jonsson6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reducing scan-time while maintaining sufficient image quality is a common issue in nuclear medicine diagnostics. This matter can be addressed by different post-processing methods such as Pixon® image processing. The aim of the present study was to evaluate if a commercially available noise-reducing Pixon-algorithm applied on whole body bone scintigraphy acquired with half the standard scan-time could provide the same clinical information as full scan-time non-processed images.Entities:
Keywords: Half-time scanning; Pixon-algorithm; Planar imaging; Visual grading; Whole body bone scintigraphy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26377427 PMCID: PMC4573178 DOI: 10.1186/s13550-015-0127-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res ISSN: 2191-219X Impact factor: 3.138
Fig. 1Images corresponding to a typical patient. Left: image acquired using the standard full-time protocol. Right: image acquired using the half-time protocol and processed with the Pixon-algorithm
Results from visual single evaluation with regard to detectability of diagnostically relevant findings of n = 40 images (20 images acquired with the standard protocol and 20 processed half-time images)
| Processed half-time images | Standard protocol images | |
|---|---|---|
| Observer A | ||
| Poor | 0 (0 %) | 0 (0 %) |
| Sufficient | 17 (85 %) | 1 (5 %) |
| Good | 3 (15 %) | 19 (95 %) |
| Observer B | ||
| Poor | 0 (0 %) | 0 (0 %) |
| Sufficient | 11 (55 %) | 3 (15 %) |
| Good | 9 (45 %) | 17 (85 %) |
| Observer C | ||
| Poor | 4 (20 %) | 1 (5 %) |
| Sufficient | 11 (55 %) | 6 (30 %) |
| Good | 5 (25 %) | 13 (65 %) |
| Combined | ||
| Poor | 4 (7 %) | 1 (2 %) |
| Sufficient | 39 (65 %) | 9 (15 %) |
| Good | 17 (28 %) | 50 (83 %) |
Results from visual comparison study with regard to lesion detectability, image noise, and artifacts of n = 20 image pairs (20 images acquired with the standard protocol and 20 processed half-time images)
| Processed half-time image preferred | No preference | Standard protocol image preferred | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Observer A | |||
| Lesion detectability | 2 (10 %) | 9 (45 %) | 9 (45 %) |
| Image noise | 0 (0 %) | 3 (15 %) | 17 (85 %) |
| Artifacts | 0 (0 %) | 14 (70 %) | 6 (30 %) |
| Observer B | |||
| Lesion detectability | 0 (%) | 20 (100 %) | 0 (0 %) |
| Image noise | 0 (%) | 11 (55 %) | 9 (45 %) |
| Artifacts | 0 (%) | 14 (70 %) | 6 (30 %) |
| Observer C | |||
| Lesion detectability | 5 (25 %) | 5 (25 %) | 10 (50 %) |
| Image noise | 3 (15 %) | 4 (20 %) | 13 (65 %) |
| Artifacts | 1 (5 %) | 17 (85 %) | 2 (10 %) |
| Combined | |||
| Lesion detectability | 7 (12 %) | 34 (57 %) | 19 (32 %) |
| Image noise | 3 (5 %) | 18 (30 %) | 39 (65 %) |
| Artifacts | 1 (2 %) | 45 (75 %) | 14 (23 %) |
Results of single evaluation with regard to detectability of diagnostically relevant findings of all observers presented in patient BMI intervals. The numbers in the parenthesis correspond to the number of patients in each BMI interval
| <20 (1) | 20–25 (8) | 25–30 (9) | >30 (2) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard images | ||||
| Poor | 0 % | 4 % | 0 % | 0 % |
| Sufficient | 0 % | 21 % | 15 % | 50 % |
| Good | 100 % | 75 % | 85 % | 50 % |
| Processed half-time images | ||||
| Poor | 0 % | 8 % | 4 % | 17 % |
| Sufficient | 67 % | 67 % | 54 % | 83 % |
| Good | 33 % | 25 % | 42 % | 0 % |