Iterative Reconstruction Technique for Reducing Body Radiation Dose at CT: Feasibility Study
Abstract
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.
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
- FWCI
- 40.04
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Iterative reconstruction
- Image quality
- Medicine
- Imaging phantom
- Image noise
- Nuclear medicine
- Image resolution
- Contrast (vision)