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Dual‐energy approach to contrast‐enhanced mammography using the balanced filter method: Spectral optimization and preliminary phantom measurement
Author(s) -
Saito Masatoshi
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.2790841
Subject(s) - imaging phantom , mammography , materials science , voltage , filter (signal processing) , optics , digital mammography , biomedical engineering , physics , computer science , breast cancer , medicine , cancer , quantum mechanics , computer vision
Dual‐energy contrast agent‐enhanced mammography is a technique of demonstrating breast cancers obscured by a cluttered background resulting from the contrast between soft tissues in the breast. The technique has usually been implemented by exploiting two exposures to different x‐ray tube voltages. In this article, another dual‐energy approach using the balanced filter method without switching the tube voltages is described. For the spectral optimization of dual‐energy mammography using the balanced filters, we applied a theoretical framework reported by Lemacks et al. [Med. Phys. 29, 1739–1751 (2002)] to calculate the signal‐to‐noise ratio (SNR) in an iodinated contrast agent subtraction image. This permits the selection of beam parameters such as tube voltage and balanced filter material, and the optimization of the latter's thickness with respect to some critical quantity—in this case, mean glandular dose. For an imaging system with a 0.1 mm thick CsI:Tl scintillator, we predict that the optimal tube voltage would be 45 kVp for a tungsten anode using zirconium, iodine, and neodymium balanced filters. A mean glandular dose of 1.0 mGy is required to obtain an SNR of 5 in order to detect 1.0 mg ∕ cm 2iodine in the resulting clutter‐free image of a 5 cm thick breast composed of 50% adipose and 50% glandular tissue. In addition to spectral optimization, we carried out phantom measurements to demonstrate the present dual‐energy approach for obtaining a clutter‐free image, which preferentially shows iodine, of a breast phantom comprising three major components—acrylic spheres, olive oil, and an iodinated contrast agent. The detection of iodine details on the cluttered background originating from the contrast between acrylic spheres and olive oil is analogous to the task of distinguishing contrast agents in a mixture of glandular and adipose tissues.