Multidetector CT urography: experimental analysis of radiation dose reduction in an animal model.

Standard

Multidetector CT urography: experimental analysis of radiation dose reduction in an animal model. / Kemper, Jörn; Regier, Marc; Bansmann, Paul Martin; Begemann, Philipp; Stork, Alexander; Nagel, Hans Dieter; Adam, Gerhard; Nolte-Ernsting, Claus.

In: EUR RADIOL, Vol. 17, No. 9, 9, 2007, p. 2318-2324.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kemper, J, Regier, M, Bansmann, PM, Begemann, P, Stork, A, Nagel, HD, Adam, G & Nolte-Ernsting, C 2007, 'Multidetector CT urography: experimental analysis of radiation dose reduction in an animal model.', EUR RADIOL, vol. 17, no. 9, 9, pp. 2318-2324. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17429649?dopt=Citation>

APA

Kemper, J., Regier, M., Bansmann, P. M., Begemann, P., Stork, A., Nagel, H. D., Adam, G., & Nolte-Ernsting, C. (2007). Multidetector CT urography: experimental analysis of radiation dose reduction in an animal model. EUR RADIOL, 17(9), 2318-2324. [9]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17429649?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Kemper J, Regier M, Bansmann PM, Begemann P, Stork A, Nagel HD et al. Multidetector CT urography: experimental analysis of radiation dose reduction in an animal model. EUR RADIOL. 2007;17(9):2318-2324. 9.

Bibtex

@article{c4dd6dd003c54522b12cc8838422bec7,
title = "Multidetector CT urography: experimental analysis of radiation dose reduction in an animal model.",
abstract = "The purpose of this study was to evaluate the possibility of reducing X-ray exposure during multidetector CT urography (MDCTU) considering image quality using a porcine model. MDCTU was performed in eight healthy pigs. Scanning was conducted using a gradual reduction of the tube current-time product at 120 kV [200-20 mAs (eff.) in ten steps]. Three blinded observers independently evaluated the image data for anatomic detail, subjective image quality, and subjective image noise. Overall image quality was compared to milliampere-second settings and radiation dose. Objective noise measurements were assessed. Noise measurements in patients were also performed to verify the comparabilty of the animal model. Adequate image quality allowing for detailed visualization of the upper urinary tract was obtained when the tube current-time product was decreased to 70 eff. mAs at 120 kV. Image noise did not impair image quality to a relevant degree using these parameters. There was high agreement among the observers (ICC = 0.95). In the animal experiments, reduced-dose MDCTU produced good image quality. A maximum current-time product reduction to 70 eff. mAs at 120 kV (CTDI(vol) = 5.3 mGy) proved to be feasible, thereby offering an advantageous dosage reduction. The study provides a basis for the development of reduced-dose MDCTU protocols in humans.",
author = "J{\"o}rn Kemper and Marc Regier and Bansmann, {Paul Martin} and Philipp Begemann and Alexander Stork and Nagel, {Hans Dieter} and Gerhard Adam and Claus Nolte-Ernsting",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "17",
pages = "2318--2324",
journal = "EUR RADIOL",
issn = "0938-7994",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Multidetector CT urography: experimental analysis of radiation dose reduction in an animal model.

AU - Kemper, Jörn

AU - Regier, Marc

AU - Bansmann, Paul Martin

AU - Begemann, Philipp

AU - Stork, Alexander

AU - Nagel, Hans Dieter

AU - Adam, Gerhard

AU - Nolte-Ernsting, Claus

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - The purpose of this study was to evaluate the possibility of reducing X-ray exposure during multidetector CT urography (MDCTU) considering image quality using a porcine model. MDCTU was performed in eight healthy pigs. Scanning was conducted using a gradual reduction of the tube current-time product at 120 kV [200-20 mAs (eff.) in ten steps]. Three blinded observers independently evaluated the image data for anatomic detail, subjective image quality, and subjective image noise. Overall image quality was compared to milliampere-second settings and radiation dose. Objective noise measurements were assessed. Noise measurements in patients were also performed to verify the comparabilty of the animal model. Adequate image quality allowing for detailed visualization of the upper urinary tract was obtained when the tube current-time product was decreased to 70 eff. mAs at 120 kV. Image noise did not impair image quality to a relevant degree using these parameters. There was high agreement among the observers (ICC = 0.95). In the animal experiments, reduced-dose MDCTU produced good image quality. A maximum current-time product reduction to 70 eff. mAs at 120 kV (CTDI(vol) = 5.3 mGy) proved to be feasible, thereby offering an advantageous dosage reduction. The study provides a basis for the development of reduced-dose MDCTU protocols in humans.

AB - The purpose of this study was to evaluate the possibility of reducing X-ray exposure during multidetector CT urography (MDCTU) considering image quality using a porcine model. MDCTU was performed in eight healthy pigs. Scanning was conducted using a gradual reduction of the tube current-time product at 120 kV [200-20 mAs (eff.) in ten steps]. Three blinded observers independently evaluated the image data for anatomic detail, subjective image quality, and subjective image noise. Overall image quality was compared to milliampere-second settings and radiation dose. Objective noise measurements were assessed. Noise measurements in patients were also performed to verify the comparabilty of the animal model. Adequate image quality allowing for detailed visualization of the upper urinary tract was obtained when the tube current-time product was decreased to 70 eff. mAs at 120 kV. Image noise did not impair image quality to a relevant degree using these parameters. There was high agreement among the observers (ICC = 0.95). In the animal experiments, reduced-dose MDCTU produced good image quality. A maximum current-time product reduction to 70 eff. mAs at 120 kV (CTDI(vol) = 5.3 mGy) proved to be feasible, thereby offering an advantageous dosage reduction. The study provides a basis for the development of reduced-dose MDCTU protocols in humans.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 17

SP - 2318

EP - 2324

JO - EUR RADIOL

JF - EUR RADIOL

SN - 0938-7994

IS - 9

M1 - 9

ER -