Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - (Page 22) Advances In CT DOSE Is CT Dose Under Control? Clinicians and manufacturers attempt to lower radiation exposure from several angles. By Nick Obradovich Siemens recently introduced its SOMATOM Definition Flash, which reportedly performs a cardiac CT scan in 1 mSv. ewer topics in computed tomography (CT) are hotter today than lowering radiation dose. From mainstream media articles on radiation exposure to conference sessions on dose-lowering techniques to new ultra-fast systems designed to reduce exposure, healthcare has put a premium on this issue. Accordingly, clinicians and manufacturers have approached the problem of radiation exposure in a variety of ways, while trying not to compromise image quality. F Cardiac CT Perhaps no other CT scan has garnered more attention to dose reduction than cardiac CT. Last year, Toshiba America Medical Systems released its Aquilion One 320-detector row CT, designed to image the whole heart in a single heartbeat, thus exposing the patient to less radiation. At RSNA 2008, Siemens Healthcare debuted its SOMATOM Definition Flash dual-source CT, a scanner touted as being able to scan the entire chest region in 0.6 seconds, while keeping the radiation dose lower than other scans. It is said that the Flash can perform a spiral heart scan at less than 1 millisevert (mSv), whereas the average effective dose required for this purpose usually ranges from 8 mSv to 40 mSv, according to the company. Siemens said this opens up the possibility for the Flash to do routine cardiac scans and help coronary CTA become the gold standard scan for patients with low-and-intermediate chest pain. “That is the goal,” Bernd Montag, Ph.D., CEO of Siemens Healthcare Imaging & IT division, told Imaging Technology News at RSNA 2008. “To become the gold standard, it needs to work always. It also needs to be a safe exam.” There are other methods for lowering cardiac CT dose. On GE Healthcare’s LightSpeed CT750, the scanner allows for modulating the kilovolts (kV) for 100 kV tube imaging. The scanner also uses the step-and-shoot mode, an imaging technique that limits exposure only to the portion of the cardiac cycle when data acquisition is relevant. The step-and-shoot has significantly lowered the dose, according to James Min, M.D., associate professor of medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College at Cornell University, assistant attending physician, New York-Presbyterian Hospital in Ithaca, NY. “We probably use it on about ninety percent of our patients and they are getting radiation doses 22 | ITN | Jan/Feb 2009 | ITNonline.net of about 3 to 4 milliseverts routinely,” said Dr. Min. “It has probably reduced [radiation] by about 75 percent.” The only patient population that clinicians can’t use the step-and-shoot method on is patients with high heart rates, according to Dr. Min. In those instances, the image quality is poor. Sweden-based Sapheneia – an imaging hardware and software company – manufactures the Clarity CT Solution that aims to lower radiation dose by utilizing proprietary post-processing algorithms, enabling radiologists to use less radiation during the acquisition. The Cardiology Associates of Martin & SF in Larkspur, CA, recently began use the Clarity CT Solution during cardiac scans. According to James Adams, M.D., the radiation dose in coronary CTA scans and calcium scoring scans have decreased by over 50 percent. filter which constitutes mathematical algorithms that resemble the human vision system. The filter aims to reduce noise and improve image quality. The software is integrated in the image flow and the filtrated images are delivered automatically into the ordinary picture archive of the clinic. One of the hospital’s studies found that using the image filter software helped reduce radiation dose by as much as 75 percent without compromising diagnostic acceptability or lesion detection for chest multidectector CT scans. Pediatric CT There are a variety of issues in imaging pediatric patients. Deciding whether a CT (or any scan) is an important first step, according to Donald Frush, M.D., professor of radiology at the Duke University School of Medicine and chief of pediatric radiology at Duke Children’s Hospital and Health Center, and a leading pediatric radiation dose expert. Clinicians may be more apt to order a scan for children because they (the children) have less clinical history, and because clinicians may feel more anxiety to not miss anything when trying to diagnose a child. Radiation is a big concern in pediatric imaging for a variety of reasons. Children are two to three times more sensitive to radiation in terms of biological effect, with some experts estimating children are up to 10 times more sensitive, according to Dr. Frush. “You have to realize with kids that they might be getting a CT scan or two when they are five years old for some medical condition. One or two CT exams isn’t really going to make significant difference in terms of developing cancer, but you don’t know what that child is going to need at 10 or 15 or 20 or 30,” Dr. Frush said. “They may develop kidney stones and get five or 10 CTs. They have this cumulative possibility that someone who is 75 or 80 doesn’t.” Dr. Frush developed protocols for CT radiation dose based on the Broselow-Luten system that has been used in emergency departments. The Color Coding for Kids CT protocols, found on GE Healthcare’s CT scanners, aim to lower the radiation dose in children by adjusting the parameters according to a patient’s size and weight. “That’s what technologists and radiologists want,” Dr. Frush said. “They want to have sizeappropriate protocols. Many of the previous protocols were based on age. Age is only a rough indicator of size.” One or two CT exams isn’t really going to make a significant difference in terms of developing cancer, but you don’t know what that child is going to need at age 10 or 15 or 20 or 30. — Dr. Donald Frush Duke Children’s Hospital and Health Center Thoracic CT At a refresher course at RSNA 2008, Narinder Paul, M.D., of the University of Toronto and Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, demonstrated several cardiothoracic CT images (in non-pediatric cases) taken at different kilovolt peaks (kVp) to illustrate that using a lower kVp in many cases won’t compromise the integrity of the diagnosis, yet will significantly lower the radiation. “The images might not be pretty – there may be some noise – but you can make the diagnosis,” Dr. Paul told the audience. In order to lower the kVp for CT scans, “your radiologists must buy into it.” Dr. Paul noted that in some cases where multiple CT scans are needed for the same body part, it becomes particularly important to lower the dose. Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston presented research at RSNA 2008 on studies they conducted using SharpView CT software (made by Sweden-based SharpView AB), an adaptive http://www.ITNonline.net
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 Contents IMRT Imaging RT Solutions for Troublesome Tumors PACS Radiology to Close the Imaging Loop Will Web-Based PACS Take Over? Is CT Dose Under Control? The Best in Digital Mammography Breast Biopsy Systems MX Series Monitors Provide University of Pennsylvania Quality Assurance Reduce Waste to Raise Revenue Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 (Page 1) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Contents (Page 2) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Contents (Page 3) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - IMRT (Page 4) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - IMRT (Page 5) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Imaging (Page 6) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - RT Solutions for Troublesome Tumors (Page 7) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - RT Solutions for Troublesome Tumors (Page 8) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - PACS (Page 9) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - PACS (Page 10) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - PACS (Page 11) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - PACS (Page 12) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - PACS (Page 13) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - PACS (Page 16) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Radiology to Close the Imaging Loop (Page 17) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Will Web-Based PACS Take Over? (Page 18) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Will Web-Based PACS Take Over? (Page 19) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Will Web-Based PACS Take Over? (Page 20) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Will Web-Based PACS Take Over? (Page 21) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Is CT Dose Under Control? (Page 22) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Is CT Dose Under Control? (Page 23) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - The Best in Digital Mammography (Page 24) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Breast Biopsy Systems (Page 25) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Breast Biopsy Systems (Page 26) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Breast Biopsy Systems (Page 27) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Breast Biopsy Systems (Page 28) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Breast Biopsy Systems (Page 29) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - MX Series Monitors Provide University of Pennsylvania Quality Assurance (Page 30) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Reduce Waste to Raise Revenue (Page 31) Imaging Technology News - January/February 2009 - Reduce Waste to Raise Revenue (Page 32)
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