Paper
22 March 2010 Potential benefit of the CT adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction method for pediatric cardiac diagnosis
Frédéric A. Miéville, Paul Ayestaran, Christophe Argaud, Elena Rizzo, Phalla Ou, Francis Brunelle, François Gudinchet, François Bochud, Francis R. Verdun
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Adaptive Statistical Iterative Reconstruction (ASIR) is a new imaging reconstruction technique recently introduced by General Electric (GE). This technique, when combined with a conventional filtered back-projection (FBP) approach, is able to improve the image noise reduction. To quantify the benefits provided on the image quality and the dose reduction by the ASIR method with respect to the pure FBP one, the standard deviation (SD), the modulation transfer function (MTF), the noise power spectrum (NPS), the image uniformity and the noise homogeneity were examined. Measurements were performed on a control quality phantom when varying the CT dose index (CTDIvol) and the reconstruction kernels. A 64-MDCT was employed and raw data were reconstructed with different percentages of ASIR on a CT console dedicated for ASIR reconstruction. Three radiologists also assessed a cardiac pediatric exam reconstructed with different ASIR percentages using the visual grading analysis (VGA) method. For the standard, soft and bone reconstruction kernels, the SD is reduced when the ASIR percentage increases up to 100% with a higher benefit for low CTDIvol. MTF medium frequencies were slightly enhanced and modifications of the NPS shape curve were observed. However for the pediatric cardiac CT exam, VGA scores indicate an upper limit of the ASIR benefit. 40% of ASIR was observed as the best trade-off between noise reduction and clinical realism of organ images. Using phantom results, 40% of ASIR corresponded to an estimated dose reduction of 30% under pediatric cardiac protocol conditions. In spite of this discrepancy between phantom and clinical results, the ASIR method is as an important option when considering the reduction of radiation dose, especially for pediatric patients.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Frédéric A. Miéville, Paul Ayestaran, Christophe Argaud, Elena Rizzo, Phalla Ou, Francis Brunelle, François Gudinchet, François Bochud, and Francis R. Verdun "Potential benefit of the CT adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction method for pediatric cardiac diagnosis", Proc. SPIE 7622, Medical Imaging 2010: Physics of Medical Imaging, 76222D (22 March 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.843903
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Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image quality

Modulation transfer functions

Computed tomography

Bone

Denoising

Image quality standards

Lung

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