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Journal ArticleDOI

A methodology for image quality evaluation of advanced CT systems.

Joshua M. Wilson, +3 more
- 01 Mar 2013 - 
- Vol. 40, Iss: 3, pp 031908-031908
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TLDR
Phantom and image quality analysis software were created for assessing CT image quality over a range of contrasts, doses, and body sizes capable of characterizing the performance of reconstruction algorithms and tube current modulation techniques.
Abstract
Purpose: This work involved the development of a phantom-based method to quantify the performance of tube current modulation and iterative reconstruction in modern computed tomography (CT) systems. The quantification included resolution, HU accuracy, noise, and noise texture accounting for the impact of contrast, prescribed dose, reconstruction algorithm, and body size. Methods: A 42-cm-long, 22.5-kg polyethylene phantom was designed to model four body sizes. Each size was represented by a uniform section, for the measurement of the noise-power spectrum (NPS), and a feature section containing various rods, for the measurement of HU and the task-based modulation transfer function (TTF). The phantom was scanned on a clinical CT system (GE, 750HD) using a range of tube current modulation settings (NI levels) and reconstruction methods (FBP and ASIR30). An image quality analysis program was developed to process the phantom data to calculate the targeted image quality metrics as a function of contrast, prescribed dose, and body size. Results: The phantom fabrication closely followed the design specifications. In terms of tube current modulation, the tube current and resulting image noise varied as a function of phantom size as expected based on the manufacturer specification: From the 16- to 37-cm section, the HU contrast for each rod was inversely related to phantom size, and noise was relatively constant (<5% change). With iterative reconstruction, the TTF exhibited a contrast dependency with better performance for higher contrast objects. At low noise levels, TTFs of iterative reconstruction were better than those of FBP, but at higher noise, that superiority was not maintained at all contrast levels. Relative to FBP, the NPS of iterative reconstruction exhibited an ∼30% decrease in magnitude and a 0.1 mm−1 shift in the peak frequency. Conclusions: Phantom and image quality analysis software were created for assessing CT image quality over a range of contrasts, doses, and body sizes. The testing platform enabled robust NPS, TTF, HU, and pixel noise measurements as a function of body size capable of characterizing the performance of reconstruction algorithms and tube current modulation techniques.

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Citations
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Diagnostic Performance of an Advanced Modeled Iterative Reconstruction Algorithm for Low-Contrast Detectability with a Third-Generation Dual-Source Multidetector CT Scanner: Potential for Radiation Dose Reduction in a Multireader Study

TL;DR: Low-contrast detectability performance increased with increasing object size, object contrast, dose index, section thickness, and ADMIRE strength.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noise and spatial resolution properties of a commercially available deep learning‐based CT reconstruction algorithm

TL;DR: The deep-learning based CT reconstruction demonstrated a strong noise magnitude reduction compared to FBP while maintaining similar noise texture and high-contrast spatial resolution, however, the algorithm resulted in images with a locally non-stationary noise in lung textured backgrounds and had somewhat degraded low-cont contrast spatial resolution similar to what has been observed in currently available iterative reconstruction techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of volumetric noise and resolution performance for linear and nonlinear CT reconstruction methods.

TL;DR: A methodology was developed to measure three-dimensional CT noise and resolution properties for iterative reconstruction, especially at challenging measurement conditions with low contrast and high image noise, and demonstrated its utility for evaluating commercial CT systems.
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Quantum noise properties of CT images with anatomical textured backgrounds across reconstruction algorithms: FBP and SAFIRE

TL;DR: Designing anatomically informed textured phantoms to assess quantum noise properties across two clinically available reconstruction algorithms, filtered back projection (FBP) and sinogram affirmed iterative reconstruction (SAFIRE) and finding may not be representative of those in actual patients for nonlinear reconstruction algorithms.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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