The radiation dose received by patients undergoing chest radiography was included. 200 patients who attended these investigations in 10 hospitals in Iran were randomly selected from all ages groups and both female and...The radiation dose received by patients undergoing chest radiography was included. 200 patients who attended these investigations in 10 hospitals in Iran were randomly selected from all ages groups and both female and male. Critically ill patients were excluded. This paper presents the work, which was implemented on 200 patients and evaluated using the entrance skin dose (ESD) in the posterior anterior (PA) chest projection measured directly at the center of the X-ray field. In addition, the machine room, and dark room .parameters, as well as work practices and repeat rates were studied. The quality control (QC) parameters and the ESD before and after QC were evaluated utilizing an anthropomorphic phantom to define the optimal exposure condition at all hospitals. This research shows that after using the QC parameters and after optimization of the exposure conditions, the ESD was decreased by 42% on average. Also the qua/ity of the radiographs generally increased. The reported method is easily implemented in any clinical situation where optimization of chest radiography is needed.展开更多
For cone beam computed tomography(CBCT),there has long been a desire to modulate the intensity and distribution of the X-rays to accommodate the patient’s anatomy as the gantry rotates from one projection to another....For cone beam computed tomography(CBCT),there has long been a desire to modulate the intensity and distribution of the X-rays to accommodate the patient’s anatomy as the gantry rotates from one projection to another.This would reduce both image artifacts and radiation dose.However,the current beam modulation setups,such as dynamic bowtie filters,may be too complex for practical use in clinical applications.This study aimed to investigate a simplified dynamic beam filtration strategy for CBCT imaging to reduce image artifacts and radiation dose.In this study,the beam filtration was designed to vary dynamically as the CBCT gantry rotates around the object.Specifically,two distinct components were integrated:the sheet filter part and the bowtie filter part.The dynamic beam filtration setup has two working schemes,one is a combination of dynamic sheet filter and dynamic bowtie filter,denoted as dynamic filterdynamic bowtie(DFDB);the other is a combination of dynamic sheet filter and static bowtie filter,denoted as dynamic filter-static bowtie(DFSB).Numerical imaging experiments were performed for three human body parts:the shoulder,chest,and knee.In addition,the Monte Carlo simulation platform MC-GPU was used to generate the dose distribution maps.Results showed that the proposed DFDB and DFSB beam filtration schemes can significantly reduce the image artifacts and thus improve the CBCT image quality.Depending on the scanned object,the total radiation dose could be reduced by 30%.The proposed simple dynamic beam filtration strategy,especially the DFSB approach,could be beneficial in the future to improve the CBCT image quality with reduced image artifacts and radiation dose.展开更多
基金partially supported by the NSF CAREER Award CBET-1540898Baodong Liu was partially supported by IHEP-CAS Scientific Research Foundation 2013IHEPYJRC801
文摘The radiation dose received by patients undergoing chest radiography was included. 200 patients who attended these investigations in 10 hospitals in Iran were randomly selected from all ages groups and both female and male. Critically ill patients were excluded. This paper presents the work, which was implemented on 200 patients and evaluated using the entrance skin dose (ESD) in the posterior anterior (PA) chest projection measured directly at the center of the X-ray field. In addition, the machine room, and dark room .parameters, as well as work practices and repeat rates were studied. The quality control (QC) parameters and the ESD before and after QC were evaluated utilizing an anthropomorphic phantom to define the optimal exposure condition at all hospitals. This research shows that after using the QC parameters and after optimization of the exposure conditions, the ESD was decreased by 42% on average. Also the qua/ity of the radiographs generally increased. The reported method is easily implemented in any clinical situation where optimization of chest radiography is needed.
文摘For cone beam computed tomography(CBCT),there has long been a desire to modulate the intensity and distribution of the X-rays to accommodate the patient’s anatomy as the gantry rotates from one projection to another.This would reduce both image artifacts and radiation dose.However,the current beam modulation setups,such as dynamic bowtie filters,may be too complex for practical use in clinical applications.This study aimed to investigate a simplified dynamic beam filtration strategy for CBCT imaging to reduce image artifacts and radiation dose.In this study,the beam filtration was designed to vary dynamically as the CBCT gantry rotates around the object.Specifically,two distinct components were integrated:the sheet filter part and the bowtie filter part.The dynamic beam filtration setup has two working schemes,one is a combination of dynamic sheet filter and dynamic bowtie filter,denoted as dynamic filterdynamic bowtie(DFDB);the other is a combination of dynamic sheet filter and static bowtie filter,denoted as dynamic filter-static bowtie(DFSB).Numerical imaging experiments were performed for three human body parts:the shoulder,chest,and knee.In addition,the Monte Carlo simulation platform MC-GPU was used to generate the dose distribution maps.Results showed that the proposed DFDB and DFSB beam filtration schemes can significantly reduce the image artifacts and thus improve the CBCT image quality.Depending on the scanned object,the total radiation dose could be reduced by 30%.The proposed simple dynamic beam filtration strategy,especially the DFSB approach,could be beneficial in the future to improve the CBCT image quality with reduced image artifacts and radiation dose.