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Review of Clinical Applications for Virtual Monoenergetic Dual-Energy CT.

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TLDR
The authors recommend routine reconstruction of VM images at 50 keV when using dual-energy CT to exploit the increased contrast properties and suggest VM imaging at 120 keV is useful for the initial assessment of beam-hardening artifacts.
Abstract
In this article, the authors discuss the technical background and summarize the current body of literature regarding virtual monoenergetic (VM) images derived from dual-energy CT data, which can be reconstructed between 40 and 200 keV. Substantially improved iodine attenuation at lower kiloelectron volt levels and reduced beam-hardening artifacts at higher kiloelectron volt levels have been demonstrated from all major manufacturers of dual-energy CT units. Improved contrast attenuation with VM imaging at lower kiloelectron volt levels enables better delineation and diagnostic accuracy in the detection of various vascular or oncologic abnormalities. Low-kiloelectron-volt VM imaging may be useful for salvaging CT studies with suboptimal contrast material delivery or providing additional information on the arterial vasculature obtained from venous phase acquisitions. For patients with renal impairment, substantial reductions in the use of iodinated contrast material can be achieved by using lower-energy VM imaging. The authors recommend routine reconstruction of VM images at 50 keV when using dual-energy CT to exploit the increased contrast properties. For reduction of beam-hardening artifacts, VM imaging at 120 keV is useful for the initial assessment.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

First Clinical Photon-counting Detector CT System: Technical Evaluation

- 01 Apr 2022 - 
TL;DR: Willelink et al. as discussed by the authors evaluated the technical performance of a dual-source photon-counting detector (PCD) CT system with use of phantoms and representative participant examinations.
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Update on Multienergy CT: Physics, Principles, and Applications

TL;DR: The most commonly used multienergy CT images are virtual monoenergetic images (VMIs), iodine maps, virtual noncontrast (VNC) images, and uric acid images.
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Full field-of-view, high-resolution, photon-counting detector CT: Technical assessment and initial patient experience

TL;DR: In this article, a photon-counting detector (PCD) computed tomography (CT) system using phantoms was used to assess image uniformity, CT number accuracy, noise power spectrum, spatial resolution and material decomposition.
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Dual energy CT in clinical routine: how it works and how it adds value

TL;DR: Following a review of acquisition and post-processing techniques, this work presents a case-based approach to highlight the added value of DECT in common clinical scenarios, including improved lesion detection,Improved lesion characterization, improved ease of interpretation, improved prognostication, and more.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dual- and Multi-Energy CT: Principles, Technical Approaches, and Clinical Applications

TL;DR: The underlying motivation and physical principles of dual- or multi-energy CT are reviewed, the current and evolving clinical applications are introduced and each of the current technical approaches is described.
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State of the Art: Iterative CT Reconstruction Techniques

TL;DR: In this contribution, the technical bases of IR are reviewed and the currently available algorithms released by the major CT manufacturers are described and the current status of their clinical implementation is surveyed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of Two Iterative Techniques for Reducing Metal Artifacts in Computed Tomography

TL;DR: The simulations showed that MDT reduces artifacts due to photon starvation, beam hardening, and motion and does not introduce new streaks between metal and bone and yields reduced metal streak artifacts and better-quality images than does FBP, LI, or SART.
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Reduced Iodine Load at CT Pulmonary Angiography with Dual-Energy Monochromatic Imaging: Comparison with Standard CT Pulmonary Angiography—A Prospective Randomized Trial

TL;DR: Dual-energy CTPA with image reconstruction at 50 keV allows a significant reduction in iodine load while improving intravascular signal intensity, maintaining SNR and with comparable radiation dose.
Journal ArticleDOI

Material Separation Using Dual-Energy CT: Current and Emerging Applications

TL;DR: Clinical applications of DE CT leverage both material-specific images and virtual monochromatic images to expand the current role of CT and overcome several limitations of single-energy CT.
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