Coronary artery stent imaging with CT using an integrated electronics detector and iterative reconstructions: First in vitro experience |
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Authors: | Jochen von Spiczak Fabian Morsbach Sebastian Winklhofer Thomas Frauenfelder Sebastian Leschka Thomas Flohr David Maintz Harald Seifarth Alexander C. Bunck Paul Stolzmann Hatem Alkadhi |
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Affiliation: | 1. Unità Operativa di Interventistica Cardiovascolare, Presidio Ospedaliero Pineta Grande, Castelvolturno, Italy;2. Unità Operativa di Cardiologia Invasiva, Casa di Salute Santa Lucia, San Giuseppe Vesuviano, Italy;3. Department of Medico-Surgical Sciences and Biotechnologies, Sapienza University of Rome, Latina, Italy |
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Abstract: | BackgroundDespite continuous improvements in CT technology, accurate stent lumen delineation remains challenging.PurposeThe aim was to evaluate the quality of coronary stent lumen delineation with CT using a detector with integrated electronics.MethodsTwelve coronary stents placed in plastic tubes and filled with contrast agent (CT number 250 HU) were imaged with either a 128-section dual-source CT machine equipped with conventional detector or with integrated electronics. On both scanners, images were reconstructed with filtered back projection (slice thickness 0.6 mm; increment 0.4 mm) and sinogram-affirmed iterative reconstruction (slice thickness 0.6 mm; increment 0.4 mm), and with iterative reconstruction (slice thickness 0.5 mm; increment 0.3 mm) on the integrated scanner. Two blinded, independent readers assessed image quality, noise, in-stent diameter, in-stent attenuation, and image sharpness by using signal intensity profiles across stents.ResultsInterreader agreement for image quality assessment was substantial (κ = 0.798). Both readers rated best image quality in data sets from integrated detector at highest spatial resolution (86 or 72% of stents rated best quality). Image noise was significantly lower in data sets scanned with integrated detector, being lowest at 0.6 mm slice thickness (14.3 vs 21.0 HU; P < .001). Differences between measured and true in-stent diameters and differences in attenuation across stents were smallest, and average/maximum image sharpness was highest in data sets from the integrated detector using iterative reconstructions.ConclusionCT coronary stent imaging is significantly improved by using a detector with integrated electronics combined with iterative reconstructions. |
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Keywords: | Computed tomography Coronary artery Detector Iterative reconstruction Stent |
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