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SU‐FF‐I‐34: Effect of Motion On High Contrast Vessel‐Like Objects for Volumetric DCE‐CT
Author(s) -
Owrangi A,
Keller H,
Coolens C
Publication year - 2009
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 - 10.1118/1.3181153
Subject(s) - imaging phantom , scanner , rotation (mathematics) , orientation (vector space) , biomedical engineering , nuclear medicine , contrast (vision) , materials science , motion (physics) , physics , geometry , optics , mathematics , medicine , classical mechanics
Purpose: This study aims to assess the impact of motion on high‐contrast vessel‐like objects in volumetric CT scans as a step towards volumetric DCE‐CT on a 320‐slice CT scanner. Material and Methods: An acrylic cylindrical phantom was constructed to investigate influence of motion on contrast‐enhanced cylindrical structures (capsules) mimicking contrast‐bearing blood vessels. The phantom consists of 12 Teflon capsules of varying diameters (1, 2, 5 and 10 mm) embedded at predefined positions and in different orientations (longitudinal, diagonal and axial). A motor‐driven platform provided uniform phantom motion speeds of 0, 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 cm/s along the longitudinal axis of the scanner. Gantry rotation speeds T G was varied between 0.35 and 3 s. All scans were acquired on a Toshiba Aquilion ONE CT scanner with a field‐of‐view of 16 cm in one rotation. Results: For a given phantom motion speed, HU decreased with increasing T G . Increasing the phantom motion speed from 0 to 2.0 cm/s reduced the HU by 9% for T G = 0.35 s and by 21% for T G = 3 s. Measured HU values also decreased with increasing T G for the other capsule orientations, however, it was least pronounced for the longitudinal orientation. The discrepancy between longitudinal and axial orientation is 2% for T G = 0.35 s and 9% for T G = 3 s. These differences are more pronounced for smaller capsules. Conclusions: A systematic study was performed to quantify the impact of motion on dynamic contrast‐enhanced CT measurements. It was found that contrast in vessel‐like objects is affected by orientation and motion. However, for fast gantry rotations (< 0.5 s) motion affects the contrast measurement by generally less than 10% for different phantom speeds and less than 2% for different vessel orientations. With this phantom, optimization of different scan parameters is possible.