Are physical measures good indicators of image quality at low dose levels? A pilot study


Autoria(s): Lança, Luís; Andersen, E. N.; Carvalho, G.; Gerwen, M.; Jorge, José; Kleiker, M.; Markali, B.; Nightingale, P.; Hogg, Peter
Data(s)

29/06/2016

29/06/2016

2016

Resumo

Purpose: To evaluate if physical measures of noise predict image quality at high and low noise levels. Method: Twenty-four images were acquired on a DR system using a Pehamed DIGRAD phantom at three kVp settings (60, 70 and 81) across a range of mAs values. The image acquisition setup consisted of 14 cm of PMMA slabs with the phantom placed in the middle at 120 cm SID. Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and Contrast-tonoise ratio (CNR) were calculated for each of the images using ImageJ software and 14 observers performed image scoring. Images were scored according to the observer`s evaluation of objects visualized within the phantom. Results: The R2 values of the non-linear relationship between objective visibility score and CNR (60kVp R2 = 0.902; 70Kvp R2 = 0.913; 80kVp R2 = 0.757) demonstrate a better fit for all 3 kVp settings than the linear R2 values. As CNR increases for all kVp settings the Object Visibility also increases. The largest increase for SNR at low exposure values (up to 2 mGy) is observed at 60kVp, when compared with 70 or 81kVp.CNR response to exposure is similar. Pearson r was calculated to assess the correlation between Score, OV, SNR and CNR. None of the correlations reached a level of statistical significance (p>0.01). Conclusion: For object visibility and SNR, tube potential variations may play a role in object visibility. Higher energy X-ray beam settings give lower SNR but higher object visibility. Object visibility and CNR at all three tube potentials are similar, resulting in a strong positive relationship between CNR and object visibility score. At low doses the impact of radiographic noise does not have a strong influence on object visibility scores because in noisy images objects could still be identified.

Identificador

Lança L, Andersen EN, Carvalho G, Gerwen v. M, Jorge J, Kleiker M, et al. Are physical measures good indicators of image quality at low dose levels? A pilot study. In: Hogg P, Blakeley C, Buissink C, editors. OPTIMAX 2015 – Multicultural team-based research in radiography: a holistic educational approach. Groningen: Hanze University of Applied Sciences; 2016. p. 128-42.

9781907842771

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.21/6256

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Hanze University of Applied Sciences

Relação

http://usir.salford.ac.uk/38008/1/Ebook%20Hanze%202015.pdf

Direitos

openAccess

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

Palavras-Chave #Radiology #Image quality #Dosimetry #X-ray
Tipo

bookPart