Author/Authors :
Serge Van Sint Jan، نويسنده , , Stéphane Sobzack، نويسنده , , Pierre-Michel Dugailly، نويسنده , , Véronique Feipel، نويسنده , , Philippe Lefèvre، نويسنده , , Jean-Louis Lufimpadio، نويسنده , , Patrick Salvia، نويسنده , , MARCO VICECONTI، نويسنده , , Marcel Rooze، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background
The number of in vivo clinical biomedical experiments based on computed tomography is increasing. International radiation-protection bodies are promoting the use of low-dose computed tomography to reduce radiation absorption by the subject undergoing imaging. On the other hand no data exist in the literature to quantify whether or not low-dose computed tomography would lead to a decrease of result quality when used for three-dimensional bone modeling and related measurements.
Methods
This paper aimed at finding a consensus between minimal X-ray radiation of the subject, and satisfactory image data quality, especially for accurate three-dimensional bone modeling. Several standard computed tomography and low-dose computed tomography sequences were analyzed in three tests and statistically compared.
Findings
Absence of significant difference between standard and low-dose computed sequences indicated that the low-dose setting would not produce less accurate three-dimensional models, while it decreased the effective X-ray dose up to 90% compared to standard settings.
Interpretation
Low-dose computed tomography seems suitable for accurate three-dimensional bone modeling, while the related effective X-ray radiation is low. Such setting is therefore advised for any in vivo medical imaging aiming to collect bone data.
Keywords :
Low-dose computed tomography , LDCT , Bone , 3D