tellurium and Cadaver

tellurium has been researched along with Cadaver* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for tellurium and Cadaver

ArticleYear
Image Quality Assessment for Clinical Cadmium Telluride-Based Photon-Counting Computed Tomography Detector in Cadaveric Wrist Imaging.
    Investigative radiology, 2021, 12-01, Volume: 56, Issue:12

    Detailed visualization of bone microarchitecture is essential for assessment of wrist fractures in computed tomography (CT). This study aims to evaluate the imaging performance of a CT system with clinical cadmium telluride-based photon-counting detector (PCD-CT) compared with a third-generation dual-source CT scanner with energy-integrating detector technology (EID-CT).. Both CT systems were used for the examination of 8 cadaveric wrists with radiation dose equivalent scan protocols (low-/standard-/full-dose imaging: CTDIvol = 1.50/5.80/8.67 mGy). All wrists were scanned with 2 different operating modes of the photon-counting CT (standard-resolution and ultra-high-resolution). After reformatting with comparable reconstruction parameters and convolution kernels, subjective evaluation of image quality was performed by 3 radiologists on a 7-point scale. For estimation of interrater reliability, we report the intraclass correlation coefficient (absolute agreement, 2-way random-effects model). Signal-to-noise and contrast-to-noise ratios were calculated to provide semiquantitative assessment of image quality.. Subjective image quality of standard-dose PCD-CT examinations in ultra-high-resolution mode was superior compared with full-dose PCD-CT in standard-resolution mode (P = 0.016) and full-dose EID-CT (P = 0.040). No difference was ascertained between low-dose PCD-CT in ultra-high-resolution mode and standard-dose scans with either PCD-CT in standard-resolution mode (P = 0.108) or EID-CT (P = 0.470). Observer evaluation of standard-resolution PCD-CT and EID-CT delivered similar results in full- and standard-dose scans (P = 0.248/0.509). Intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.876 (95% confidence interval, 0.744-0.925; P < 0.001), indicating good reliability. Between dose equivalent studies, signal-to-noise and contrast-to-noise ratios were substantially higher in photon-counting CT examinations (all P's < 0.001).. Superior visualization of fine anatomy is feasible with the clinical photon-counting CT system in cadaveric wrist scans. The ultra-high-resolution scan mode suggests potential for considerable dose reduction over energy-integrating dual-source CT.

    Topics: Cadaver; Cadmium Compounds; Humans; Phantoms, Imaging; Photons; Reproducibility of Results; Tellurium; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Wrist

2021