| Literature DB >> 30050982 |
Roy P Marcus1, Jonathan M Morris1, Jane M Matsumoto1, Amy E Alexander1, Ahmed F Halaweish2, James A Kelly3, Joel G Fletcher1, Cynthia H McCollough1, Shuai Leng1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To assess the impact of metal artifact reduction techniques in 3D printing by evaluating image quality and segmentation time in both phantom and patient studies with dental restorations and/or other metal implants. An acrylic denture apparatus (Kilgore Typodent, Kilgore International, Coldwater, MI) was set in a 20 cm water phantom and scanned on a single-source CT scanner with gantry tilting capacity (SOMATOM Edge, Siemens Healthcare, Forchheim, Germany) under 5 scenerios: (1) Baseline acquisition at 120 kV with no gantry tilt, no jaw spacer, (2) acquisition at 140 kV, (3) acquisition with a gantry tilt at 15°, (4) acquisition with a non-radiopaque jaw spacer and (5) acquisition with a jaw spacer and a gantry tilt at 15°. All acquisitions were reconstructed both with and without a dedicated iterative metal artifact reduction algorithm (MAR). Patients referred for a head-and-neck exam were included into the study. Acquisitions were performed on the same scanner with 120 kV and the images were reconstructed with and without iterative MAR. Segmentation was performed on a dedicated workstation (Materialise Interactive Medical Image Control Systems; Materialise NV, Leuven, Belgium) to quantify volume of metal artifact and segmentation time.Entities:
Keywords: 3D-printing; Computed Tomography; Iterative metal artifact reduction; Metal artifact
Year: 2017 PMID: 30050982 PMCID: PMC6036666 DOI: 10.1186/s41205-017-0013-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3D Print Med ISSN: 2365-6271
Baseline imaging parameters used for the phantom and patient studies
| Phantom study | Patient study | |
|---|---|---|
| Scan type | Spiral | Spiral |
| Collimation [mm] | 128 x 0.6 | 128 x 0.6 |
| Tube potential [kVp] | 120 | 120 |
| Pitch | 0.6 | 0.8 |
| Rotation time [s] | 1 | 1 |
| Quality reference mAS | 135 | 320 |
| Reconstruction slice thickness [mm] / increment [mm] | 0.6 / 0.6 | 0.75/0.7 |
| Reconstruction kernel | J40 (iterative reconstruction with a strength of 3) | J40 (iterative reconstruction with a strength of 3) |
Fig. 1Artificial denture (a and b) placed in a 20 cm water phantom and (c and d) used for the phantom study with display of a jaw spacer (e and f)
Fig. 2Images of denture phantom scanned at 120 kV (a) and 140 kV (c), showing no difference in metal artifact. The use of dedicated metal artifact reduction algorithm extensively decreased the artifacts at both 120 kV (b) and 140 kV (d)
Fig. 3Slice series of the phantom acquisition with and without gantry tilt. In addition, all series were reconstructed with dedicated metal artifact reduction (MAR)
Fig. 4Volume rendering of the denture phantom without jaw spacer and without iterative metal artifact reduction algorithm (a). The use of the jaw spacer allowed a perfect separation of the upper from the lower jaw and hence a better separation of the metal artifacts and better depiction of the artificial teeth (b). The use of dedicated iterative metal artifact reduction extensively reduced the metal artifacts in the closed jaw phantom (c); the combination of jaw spacer and iterative metal artifact reduction allowed a perfect display of the denture with an extensive reduction of metal artifacts (d)
Fig. 5Phantom slice series combining all possible metal artifact reduction techniques
Fig. 6Patient acquired without jaw spacer and no iterative metal artifact reduction algorithm (MAR) showing extensive metal artifact affecting the display of the frontal upper teeth (a). The segmented extensive metal artifact had a volume of 36 ml (b). The use of MAR (c) reduced the metal artifact by 90.8% (d). In addition, MAR allowed a better dental display
Artifact Volume and segmentation time for 4 patients referred for head-and-neck acquisition and reconstructed with and without iterative metal artifact reconstruction. Only one patient was acquired with a jaw spacer, whereas none of the acquisitions were performed with a tilted gantry
| Patient | Iterative MAR | Artifact Volume [ml] | Segmentation time [s] | Jaw spacer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | No | 36 | 340 | No |
| Yes | 5.6 | 200 | ||
| 2 | No | 4.5 | 150 | No |
| Yes | 4.5 | 135 | ||
| 3 | No | 36 | 300 | No |
| Yes | 3.3 | 180 | ||
| 4 | No | 6.7 | 310 | Yes |
| Yes | 3.4 | 101 |
Fig. 7Images of a patient scanned with jaw spacer and reconstructed with dedicated iterative metal artifact reduction algorithm (a). The combination of both metal artifact reduction techniques allowed an excellent display of the denture structure with a low metal artifact volume (b, 3.4 ml)