AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assesses the effectiveness of abdominal CT scans for detecting body-packing at various radiation dose levels, aiming for a balance between image quality and dose reduction.
  • At a threshold of 5% of the initial radiation dose, all patients with suspected body packing were accurately identified, but doses lower than that produced unreliable results.
  • The findings indicate a minimum effective dose of 10% is necessary for accurately spotting incidental findings, ensuring patient safety while minimizing radiation exposure.

Article Abstract

Background: To evaluate the detection rate and image quality in CT-body-packer-screening at different radiation-dose levels and to determine a dose threshold that enables a reliable detection of incorporated body packs and incidental findings with a maximum of dose saving.

Materials And Methods: We retrospectively included 27 individuals who underwent an abdominal CT with automated exposure control due to suspected body packing. CT images were reconstructed at different radiation-dose levels of 50%, 10, 5% and 1% using iterative reconstructions. All 135 CT reconstructions were evaluated by three independent readers. Reviewers determined the presence of foreign bodies and evaluated the image quality using a 5-point ranking scale. In addition, visualization of incidental findings was assessed.

Results: A threshold of 5% (effective dose 0.11 ± 0.07 mSv) was necessary to correctly identify all 27 patients with suspected body packing. Extensive noise insertion to a dose level of 1% (0.02 ± 0.01 mSV) led to false-positive solid cocaine findings in three patients. Image quality was comparable between 100 and 50%. The threshold for correct identification of incidental findings was 10% of the initial dose (effective dose 0.21 ± 0.13 mSv).

Conclusions: Our results indicate that dose of abdominal CT for the detection of intracorporeal cocaine body packets can be markedly reduced to up to 5% of the initial dose while still providing sufficient image quality to detect ingested body packets. However, a minimum effective dose of 0.21 mSv (10% of initial dose) seems to be required to properly identify incidental findings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6284291PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40001-018-0356-3DOI Listing

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