Literature DB >> 27435162

Evaluation of detector readout gain mode and bowtie filters for cone-beam CT imaging of the head.

Jennifer Xu1, Alejandro Sisniega, Wojciech Zbijewski, Hao Dang, J Webster Stayman, Xiaohui Wang, David H Foos, Nafi Aygun, Vassillis E Koliatsos, Jeffrey H Siewerdsen.   

Abstract

The effects of detector readout gain mode and bowtie filters on cone-beam CT (CBCT) image quality and dose were characterized for a new CBCT system developed for point-of-care imaging of the head, with potential application to diagnosis of traumatic brain injury, intracranial hemorrhage (ICH), and stroke. A detector performance model was extended to include the effects of detector readout gain on electronic digitization noise. The noise performance for high-gain (HG), low-gain (LG), and dual-gain (DG) detector readout was evaluated, and the benefit associated with HG mode in regions free from detector saturation was quantified. Such benefit could be realized (without detector saturation) either via DG mode or by incorporation of a bowtie filter. Therefore, three bowtie filters were investigated that varied in thickness and curvature. A polyenergetic gain correction method was developed to equalize the detector response between the flood-field and projection data in the presence of a bowtie. The effect of bowtie filters on dose, scatter-to-primary ratio, contrast, and noise was quantified in phantom studies, and results were compared to a high-speed Monte Carlo (MC) simulation to characterize x-ray scatter and dose distributions in the head. Imaging in DG mode improved the contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) by ~15% compared to LG mode at a dose (D 0, measured at the center of a 16 cm CTDI phantom) of 19 mGy. MC dose calculations agreed with CTDI measurements and showed that bowtie filters reduce peripheral dose by as much as 50% at the same central dose. Bowtie filters were found to increase the CNR per unit square-root dose near the center of the image by ~5-20% depending on bowtie thickness, but reduced CNR in the periphery by ~10-40%. Images acquired at equal CTDIw with and without a bowtie demonstrated a 24% increase in CNR at the center of an anthropomorphic head phantom. Combining a thick bowtie filter with a short arc (180°  +  fan angle) scan centered on the posterior of the head reduced dose to the eye lens by up to 90%. Acquisition in DG mode (without a bowtie filter) was beneficial to the detection of small, low contrast lesions (e.g. subtle ICH) in CBCT. While bowtie filters were found to reduce dose, mitigate sensor saturation at the periphery in HG mode, and improve CNR at the center of the image, the image quality at the periphery was slightly reduced compared to DG mode, and the use of a bowtie required careful implementation of the polyenergetic flood-field correction to avoid artifacts.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27435162     DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/61/16/5973

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Med Biol        ISSN: 0031-9155            Impact factor:   3.609


  5 in total

1.  Dynamic fluence field modulation for miscentered patients in computed tomography.

Authors:  Andrew Mao; Grace J Gang; William Shyr; Reuven Levinson; Jeffrey H Siewerdsen; Satomi Kawamoto; J Webster Stayman
Journal:  J Med Imaging (Bellingham)       Date:  2018-10-24

2.  Multi-resolution statistical image reconstruction for mitigation of truncation effects: application to cone-beam CT of the head.

Authors:  Hao Dang; J Webster Stayman; Alejandro Sisniega; Wojciech Zbijewski; Jennifer Xu; Xiaohui Wang; David H Foos; Nafi Aygun; Vassilis E Koliatsos; Jeffrey H Siewerdsen
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2016-12-29       Impact factor: 3.609

3.  Cone-beam CT for imaging of the head/brain: Development and assessment of scanner prototype and reconstruction algorithms.

Authors:  P Wu; A Sisniega; J W Stayman; W Zbijewski; D Foos; X Wang; N Khanna; N Aygun; R D Stevens; J H Siewerdsen
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2020-04-03       Impact factor: 4.071

4.  Scatter-to-primary ratio in dentomaxillofacial cone-beam CT: effect of field of view and beam energy.

Authors:  Ruben Pauwels; Pisha Pittayapat; Phonkit Sinpitaksakul; Soontra Panmekiate
Journal:  Dentomaxillofac Radiol       Date:  2021-04-29       Impact factor: 2.419

5.  3D Non-Rigid Alignment of Low-Dose Scans Allows to Correct for Saturation in Lower Extremity Cone-Beam CT.

Authors:  Jennifer Maier; Andreas Maier; Bjoern Eskofier; Rebecca Fahrig; Jang-Hwan Choi
Journal:  IEEE Access       Date:  2021-05-11       Impact factor: 3.367

  5 in total

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