| Literature DB >> 31776813 |
E S Speelman1, B Brocx1, J E Wilbers1, M J de Bie1, O Ivashchenko2, Y Tank2, A J van der Molen3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Whole-body computed tomography (WBCT) is the standard diagnostic method for evaluating polytrauma patients. When patients are unable to elevate their arms, the arms are placed along the body, which affects the image quality negatively. Aim of this systematic review is to evaluate the influence of below the shoulder arm positions on image quality of WBCT.Entities:
Keywords: Artifacts; Patient positioning; Systematic review; Tomography; Traumatology; X-ray computed
Year: 2019 PMID: 31776813 PMCID: PMC7082374 DOI: 10.1007/s10140-019-01732-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Radiol ISSN: 1070-3004
Fig. 1Illustration of image quality degradation due to arm-related beam hardening (Karlo et al. [12])
Quality assessment criteria
| Criteria | Points |
|---|---|
| Selection | |
| Subject inclusion criteria | |
| Inclusion criteria are reproducible. | ✶ |
| No description. | |
| Selection of the non-intervention cohort | |
| Drawn from the same community as the intervention cohort. | ✶ |
| Drawn from a different source. | |
| No description. | |
| Outcome measurement | |
| Assessment of outcome | |
| Independent blind assessment is performed. | ✶ |
| In case of objective measurement, the methods are reproducible. | ✶ |
| None of the above. | |
| Assessment of subjects | |
| From all included subjects, results are derived. | ✶ |
| Subjects are lost without description. | |
| Comparability | |
| Comparability on the basis of the design | |
| Difference(s) in characteristics is/are defined (e.g. age, sex). | ✶ |
| No description. | |
| Comparability on the basis of the cohort | |
| Study controls for possible confounders. | ✶ |
| Not performed or no description. | |
| Comparability in CT settings | |
| Same CT-settings are executed in all groups. | ✶ |
| Study controls for different CT-settings. | ✶ |
| No control or no description. | |
Qualitative analysis was performed on each included article. Selection, outcome measurement, and comparability were main stakeholders. A maximum score of 7 points could be derived when an article meets all statements
Fig. 2Study inclusion flow diagram
Quality score evaluated by the assessment criteria in Table 1. A maximum score of 7 points could be derived when an article meets all statements
| Study | Selection | Outcome measurement | Comparability | Total points | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subject inclusion criteria. | Selection of the non-intervention cohort. | Assessment of outcome. | Assessment of subjects. | Comparability of cohorts on the basis of the design. | Comparability on the basis of the cohort. | Comparability in CT settings. | ||
| Beenen et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 6 | |
| Brink et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 7 |
| Heyer et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 3 | ||||
| Hickethier et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 5 | ||
| Hoppe et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 6 | |
| Kahn et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 4 | |||
| Karlo et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 4 | |||
| Reske et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 6 | |
| Sedlic et al. [ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | ✶ | 5 | ||
Study characteristics (in alphabetical order)
| Study | Yeara | Study design | Country | No. of patients | Quality assessmentb | Arm positionsc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beenen et al. [ | 2014 | Single center prospective study | The Netherlands | 30 | 6 | A, B, C |
| Brink et al. [ | 2008 | Single center retrospective study | The Netherlands | 177 | 7 | A, B, D |
| Hickethier et al. [ | 2018 | Single center retrospective study | Germany | 200 | 5 | A, C |
| Hoppe et al. [ | 2006 | Single center prospective study | Switzerland | 83 | 6 | A, D |
| Kahn et al. [ | 2013 | Single center retrospective study | Germany | 406 | 4 | A, B, D |
| Karlo et al. [ | 2011 | Single center retrospective study | Switzerland | 150 | 4 | A, C, D |
| Reske et al. [ | 2018 | Single center retrospective study | Germany | 308 | 6 | A, D |
| Sedlic et al. [ | 2013 | Single center retrospective study | Canada | 67 | 5 | A |
aYear of publication
bQuality score evaluated by the assessment criteria in Table 1
cArm positions, A: arm repositioning (arms elevated for abdomen CT and arms down for head and neck CT) and both arms elevated (alongside the head), B: one arm elevated and one arm either down, or in front of the upper abdomen, or placed in front of the pelvic area, C: arms on a pillow ventrally to the chest or upper abdomen and both arms crossed in front of the upper abdomen (without pillow), D: arms down (alongside the body) and both arms crossed in front of the pelvic area
Subjective measurements of image quality
| Study | Outcome | Organs |
|---|---|---|
| Beenen et al. [ | 5-point scale 1 = non-diagnostic image quality 2 = poor image quality 3 = satisfactory image quality 4 = good image quality 5 = excellent image quality | Overall quality of the total body CT Brain Cervical spine Thoracolumbar spine Lung parenchyma Mediastinum Liver Spleen Kidney Pelvis Aortic arch Portal vein Abdominal aorta at the level of the superior mesenteric artery |
| Brink et al. [ | 5-point scale 1 = non-diagnostic image quality 2 = poor image quality 3 = fair image quality 4 = good image quality 5 = excellent image quality | Aorta Liver Spleen Kidneys Spine Pelvis |
| Hickethier et al. [ | 3-point scale 1 = excellent image quality, no artefacts 2 = diagnostic image quality, artefacts present 3 = non-diagnostic image quality due to severe artefacts | Lungs Aorta Liver Spleen Thoracoabdominal spine |
| Hoppe et al. [ | 3-point scale 0 = no substantial artefacts 1 = moderate artefactsa 2 = major artefactsb | Liver Spleen |
| Kahn et al. [ | 4-point scale 1 = no artefact, excellent image quality 2 = minor artefact, no relevant effect on image quality 3 = moderate artefact with degradation of image qualityc 4 = severe artefact, precluding reliable image interpretation | Liver Spleen Kidneys Pelvis Mean of all organs |
Overview of subjective outcome measurements of image quality and evaluated organs. Sorted by study
aNot impairing a diagnostic evaluation of liver and spleen
bImpairing a diagnostic evaluation and necessitating a repeat scan with raised arms
cStill adequate diagnostic quality
Objective measurements of image quality
| Study | Outcome | Organs |
|---|---|---|
| Beenen et al. [ | Contrast enhancement (HU) | Aortic arch Abdominal aorta Portal vein Parenchym liver Parenchym spleen Parenchym renal cortex |
| Brink et al. [ | Image noise | Liver parenchym at the level of the porta hepatis in liver segment VI or VII. |
| Karlo et al. [ | Image noise | Liver segment VI or VII |
| Reske et al. [ | Image noise | Liver segment VI Aorta |
| Sedlic et al. [ | Image noise | Aorta |
This table summarises the objective measurements of image quality used in the included articles. Image noise is defined as the mean standard deviations (SD) of CT pixel values in Hounsfield Units (HU)
Subjective image quality arm positions A and D
| No significant differencea | Organ | Significant differenceb | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spleen | Beenen et al. | Brink et al. | Hoppe et al. | Kahn et al. | Karlo et al. | ||
| Liver | Beenen et al. | Brink et al. | Hoppe et al. | Kahn et al. | Karlo et al. | ||
| Beenen et al. | Kidneys | Brink et al. | Kahn et al. | ||||
| Beenen et al. | Brink et al. | Aorta | Karlo et al. | ||||
| Beenen et al. | Spine | Karlo et al. | |||||
| Beenen et al. | Brink et al. | Pelvis | Kahn et al. | ||||
Overview of differences in subjective image quality per organ. Compared for arm position A: arm repositioning (arms elevated for abdomen CT and arms down for head and neck CT) and both arms elevated (alongside the head), arm position D: arms down (alongside the body) and both arms crossed in front of the pelvic area. Names of authors refers to the used articles, Beenen et al. [13], Brink et al. [14], Hicktetier et al. [15], Hoppe et al. [8], Kahn et al. [9], and Karlo et al. [12]
aNo significant difference between arm positions A and D in subjective image quality
bSignificantly higher subjective image quality for arm position A, as compared to arm position D
Overview of differences in subjective image quality per organ
| No significant differencea | Organ | Significant differenceb | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spleen | Hickethier et al. | Kahn et al. | Karlo et al. | |
| Liver | Kahn et al. | Karlo et al. | ||
| Aorta | Hickethier et al. | Karlo et al. | ||
| Hickethier et al. | Spine | Karlo et al. | ||
Compared for arm position A: arm repositioning (arms elevated for abdomen CT and arms down for head and neck CT), arms alongside the head and C: arms on a pillow ventrally to the chest with both arms flexed at the elbow and the forearms positioned next to each other. Names of authors refers to the used articles, Hicktetier et al. [15], Kahn et al. [9], and Karlo et al. [12]
aNo significant difference between arm positions A and C in subjective image quality
bSignificantly higher subjective image quality for arm position A, as compared to arm position C
Fig. 3Image noise in hepatic region. Distribution of image noise in patients with different arm positions. Image noise is defined as the mean standard deviations (SD) of CT pixel values in Hounsfield Units (HU), measured as mean ± SD. Boxes represent means and whiskers represent SD. The groups with values significantly different from each other are indicated (✱). A: arm repositioning (arms elevated for abdomen CT and arms down for head and neck CT) and arms elevated (alongside the head), C: arms on a pillow ventrally to the chest or upper abdomen and both arms crossed in front of the upper abdomen, D: arms down (alongside the body) and both arms crossed in front of the pelvic area
Fig. 4Overall results on image quality. Overview of the overall results of different arm positions. A point was assigned if an examined arm position had a significantly lower noise level or better subjective image quality. For the other examined arm position, a point was subtracted. No points were assigned when no significant difference was found. Arm positions, A: arm repositioning (arms elevated for abdomen CT and arms down for head and neck CT) and arms elevated (alongside the head), B: one arm elevated, and one arm down or in front of the upper abdomen or in front of the pelvic area, C: arms on a pillow ventrally to the chest or upper abdomen or in front of the pelvic area, D: arms down (alongside the body) and both arms crossed in front of the pelvic area