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Dose management in CT facility
Author(s) -
Virginia Tsapaki,
Madan M. Rehani
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
biomedical imaging and intervention journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1823-5530
DOI - 10.2349/biij.3.2.e43
Subject(s) - radiation exposure , medicine , radiation dose , fluoroscopy , medical physics , computed tomography , radiology , positron emission tomography , collective dose , nuclear medicine , image quality , effective dose (radiation) , computer science , artificial intelligence , image (mathematics)
Computed Tomography (CT) examinations have rapidly increased in number over the last few years due to recent advances such as the spiral, multidetector-row, CT fluoroscopy and Positron Emission Tomography (PET)-CT technology. This has resulted in a large increase in collective radiation dose as reported by many international organisations. It is also stated that frequently, image quality in CT exceeds the level required for confident diagnosis. This inevitably results in patient radiation doses that are higher than actually required, as also stressed by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regarding the CT exposure of paediatric and small adult patients. However, the wide range in exposure parameters reported, as well as the different CT applications reveal the difficulty in standardising CT procedures. The purpose of this paper is to review the basic CT principles, outline the recent technological advances and their impact in patient radiation dose and finally suggest methods of radiation dose optimisation.

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