Publications by authors named "Christiane S Burton"

Fluoroscopy is an advanced medical imaging modality that utilizes x-rays to acquire real-time images throughout a medical examination. It is commonly used in various procedures such as in interventional radiology, cardiac catheterization, and gastrointestinal and genitourinary studies. While fluoroscopy is a valuable diagnostic and therapeutic tool, it exposes patients and medical staff to ionizing radiation, which carries health risks.

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Background: Quantifying radiation burden is necessary for optimizing imaging protocols. The normalized dose coefficient (NDC) is determined from the water-equivalent diameter (WED) and is used to scale the CTDIvol based on body habitus to determine the size specific dose estimate (SSDE). In this study we determine the SSDE prior to the CT scan and how sensitive the SSDE from WED is to the lifetime attributable risk (LAR) from BEIR VII.

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When pregnancy is discovered during or after a diagnostic examination, the physician or the patient may request an estimate of the radiation dose received by the fetus as per guidelines and standard operating procedures. This study provided the imaging community with dose estimates to the fetus from PET/CT with protocols that are adapted to University of Michigan low-dose protocols for patients known to be pregnant. There were 9 patients analyzed with data for the first, second, and third trimesters, the availability of which is quite rare.

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Purpose: Inkjet printers can be used to fabricate anthropomorphic phantoms by the use of iodine-doped ink. However, challenges persist in implementing this technique. The calibration from grayscale to ink density is complex and time-consuming.

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Background: Neck computed tomography (CT) angiography is commonly ordered for pediatric patients with soft palate trauma to exclude vascular injury. Debate exists regarding what type of imaging is indicated in this setting, particularly amid growing concern that standard neck CT angiography results in considerable radiation exposure.

Objective: To assess the diagnostic yield and estimated dose reduction of a novel targeted protocol extending from the skull base to the hyoid bone to evaluate pediatric oropharyngeal trauma.

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Purpose: Size-specific dose estimates (SSDE) requires accurate estimates of patient size surrogates. AAPM Report 204 shows that the SSDE is the product of CTDIvol and a scaling factor, the normalized dose coefficient (NDC) which depends on patient size surrogates for CT axial images. However, SSDE can be determined from CT localizer prior to CT scanning.

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Dual-energy subtraction angiography (DESA) using fast kV switching has received attention for its potential to reduce misregistration artifacts in thoracic and abdominal imaging where patient motion is difficult to control; however, commercial interventional solutions are not currently available. The purpose of this work was to adapt an x-ray angiography system for 2D and 3D DESA. The platform for the dual-energy prototype was a commercially available x-ray angiography system with a flat panel detector and an 80 kW x-ray tube.

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Purpose: Patient size-specific dose estimate (SSDE) calculations require knowledge of a patient's size. Errors in patient size propagate through SSDE calculations. AAPM Reports 204 and 220 recommend that a magnification correction be applied to patient size surrogates extracted from CT localizer radiographs.

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Purpose: To confirm AAPM Reports 204/220 and provide data for the future expansion of these reports by: (a) presenting the first large-scale confirmation of the reports using clinical data, (b) providing the community with size surrogate data for the head region which was not provided in the original reports, and additionally providing the measurements of patient ellipticity ratio for different body regions.

Method: A total of 884 routine scans were included in our analysis including data from the head, thorax, abdomen, and pelvis for adults and pediatrics. We calculated the ellipticity ratio and all of the size surrogates presented in AAPM Reports 204/220.

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Purpose: X-ray digital subtraction angiography (DSA) is widely used for vascular imaging. However, motion artifacts render it largely unsuccessful for some applications including cardiac imaging. Dual-energy imaging using fast kV switching was proposed in the past to provide the benefits of DSA with fewer motion artifacts, but image quality was inferior to DSA.

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