Photon-counting detectors are expected to bring a range of improvements to patient imaging with x-ray computed tomography (CT). One is higher spatial resolution. We demonstrate the resolution obtained using a commercial CT scanner where the original energy-integrating detector has been replaced by a single-slice, silicon-based, photon-counting detector. This prototype constitutes the first full-field-of-view silicon-based CT scanner capable of patient scanning. First, the pixel response function and focal spot profile are measured and, combining the two, the system modulation transfer function is calculated. Second, the prototype is used to scan a resolution phantom and a skull phantom. The resolution images are compared to images from a state-of-the-art CT scanner. The comparison shows that for the prototype 19 lp / cm are detectable with the same clarity as 14 lp / cm on the reference scanner at equal dose and reconstruction grid, with more line pairs visible with increasing dose and decreasing image pixel size. The high spatial resolution remains evident in the anatomy of the skull phantom and is comparable to that of other photon-counting CT prototypes present in the literature. We conclude that the deep silicon-based detector used in our study could provide improved spatial resolution in patient imaging without increasing the x-ray dose.
Complex interventional and diagnostic x-ray angiographic (XA) procedures may yield patient skin doses exceeding the
threshold for radiation induced skin injuries. Skin dose is conventionally determined by converting the incident air kerma
free-in-air into entrance surface air kerma, a process that requires the use of backscatter factors. Subsequently, the
entrance surface air kerma is converted into skin kerma using mass energy-absorption coefficient ratios tissue-to-air,
which for the photon energies used in XA is identical to the skin dose. The purpose of this work was to investigate how
the cranial bone affects backscatter factors for the dosimetry of interventional neuroradiology procedures.
The PENELOPE Monte Carlo system was used to calculate backscatter factors at the entrance surface of a spherical and
a cubic water phantom that includes a cranial bone layer. The simulations were performed for different clinical x-ray
spectra, field sizes, and thicknesses of the bone layer.
The results show a reduction of up to 15% when a cranial bone layer is included in the simulations, compared with
conventional backscatter factors calculated for a homogeneous water phantom. The reduction increases for thicker bone
layers, softer incident beam qualities, and larger field sizes, indicating that, due to the increased photoelectric crosssection
of cranial bone compared to water, the bone layer acts primarily as an absorber of low-energy photons.
For neurointerventional radiology procedures, backscatter factors calculated at the entrance surface of a water phantom
containing a cranial bone layer increase the accuracy of the skin dose determination.
Due to the relatively high occupational doses associated with interventional and diagnostic fluoroscopy procedures it is
important to create awareness about and to quantify the radiation environment that medical staff are exposed to. A
computer program was developed to analyze dose data collected from a dosimetry system that uses active personal
dosimeters to monitor staff dose in real-time, to obtain an expanded analysis of the radiation environment that clinical
staff are exposed to, on a procedural basis. The analyses that are made per procedure and staff member include:
accumulated dose μSv, maximum and median dose rate mSv/h, the amount of time a staff member has been exposed to
radiation compared to the total fluoroscopy time and the percentage of accumulated dose from 3 different dose rate
intervals, including < 0.3 mSv/h, 0.3 - 2.6 mSv/h, and < 2.6 mSv/h. The developed computer program was used to
analyze dose data collected from the dosimetry system at the Karolinska University Hospital to study the radiation
environment that different categories of staff are exposed to during interventional aorta aneurysm treatment procedures.
The analyses have provided the ability to know where to concentrate radiation safety training in interventional and
diagnostic fluoroscopy and to ensure that operating rooms are equipped with adequate radiation protection (e.g.,
radiation protection barriers etc.). The developed computer program and dose data collected from the dosimetry system
can be appropriated for other radiation environmental studies in diagnostic x-ray imaging.
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