AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of virtual monoenergetic images (VMI) from photon-counting detector CT (PCD-CT) in identifying severe lung injuries and atelectasis in patients with multiple traumas.
  • A total of 20 patients were examined using contrast-enhanced PCD-CT, with images created at different energy levels (40 to 120 keV) to analyze the contrast-to-noise ratio between injured and collapsed lung areas.
  • Results showed that lower energy levels (specifically around 40-50 keV) provided the best contrast and clarity for differentiating between severe lung injury and atelectasis, while higher energy levels like 60-70 keV offered better noise perception

Article Abstract

: To evaluate the value of virtual monoenergetic images (VMI) from photon-counting detector CT (PCD-CT) for discriminability of severe lung injury and atelectasis in polytraumatized patients. : Contrast-enhanced PCD-CT examinations of 20 polytraumatized patients with severe thoracic trauma were included in this retrospective study. Spectral PCD-CT data were reconstructed using a noise-optimized virtual monoenergetic imaging (VMI) algorithm with calculated VMIs ranging from 40 to 120 keV at 10 keV increments. Injury-to-atelectasis contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) was calculated and compared at each energy level based on CT number measurements in severely injured as well as atelectatic lung areas. Three radiologists assessed subjective discriminability, noise perception, and overall image quality. : CT values for atelectasis decreased as photon energy increased from 40 keV to 120 keV (mean Hounsfield units (HU): 69 at 40 keV; 342 at 120 keV), whereas CT values for severe lung injury remained near-constant from 40 keV to 120 keV (mean HU: 42 at 40 keV; 44 at 120 keV) with significant differences at each keV level ( < 0.001). The optimal injury-to-atelectasis CNR was observed at 40 keV in comparison with the remaining energy levels ( < 0.001) except for 50 keV ( > 0.05). In line with this, VMIs at 40 keV were rated best regarding subjective discriminability. VMIs at 60-70 keV, however, provided the highest subjective observer parameters regarding subjective image noise as well as image quality. : Discriminability between severely injured and atelectatic lung areas after thoracic trauma can be substantially improved by virtual monoenergetic imaging from PCD-CT with superior contrast and visual discriminability at 40-50 keV.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11475707PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14192231DOI Listing

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