articleAmerican Journal of RoentgenologyAug 20, 2009Closed access

Iterative Reconstruction Technique for Reducing Body Radiation Dose at CT: Feasibility Study

Mayo Clinic in Arizona

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the image noise, low-contrast resolution, image quality, and spatial resolution of adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction in low-dose body CT.

Materials And Methods

Adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction was used to scan the American College of Radiology phantom at the American College of Radiology reference value and at one-half that value (12.5 mGy). Test objects in low- and high-contrast and uniformity modules were evaluated. Low-dose CT with adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction was then tested on 12 patients (seven men, five women; average age, 67.5 years) who had previously undergone routine-dose CT. Two radiologists blinded to scanning technique evaluated images of the same patients obtained with routine-dose CT and low-dose CT with and without adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction. Image noise, low-contrast resolution, image quality, and spatial resolution were graded on a scale of 1 (best) to 4 (worst). Quantitative noise measurements were made on clinical images.

Citation impact

726
total citations
FWCI
40.04
Percentile
100%
References
48
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Iterative reconstruction
  • Image quality
  • Medicine
  • Imaging phantom
  • Image noise
  • Nuclear medicine
  • Image resolution
  • Contrast (vision)
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