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Investigation On Detectability of a Small Target for Different Slice Direction of a Volumetric Cone Beam CT Image

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C Lee

C Lee*, M Han , J Baek , Yonsei University, Incheon, Korea

Presentations

SU-E-I-10 (Sunday, July 12, 2015) 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM Room: Exhibit Hall


Purpose:To investigate the detectability of a small target for different slice direction of a volumetric cone beam CT image and its impact on dose reduction.

Methods:Analytic projection data of a sphere object (1 mm diameter, 0.2/cm attenuation coefficient) were generated and reconstructed by FDK algorithm. In this work, we compared the detectability of the small target from four different backprojection methods: hanning weighted ramp filter with linear interpolation (RECON 1), hanning weighted ramp filter with Fourier interpolation (RECON2), ramp filter with linear interpolation (RECON 3), and ramp filter with Fourier interpolation (RECON4), respectively. For noise simulation, 200 photons per measurement were used, and the noise only data were reconstructed using FDK algorithm. For each reconstructed volume, axial and coronal slice were extracted and detection-SNR was calculated using channelized Hotelling observer (CHO) with dense difference-of-Gaussian (D-DOG) channels.

Results:Detection-SNR of coronal images varies for different backprojection methods, while axial images have a similar detection-SNR. Detection-SNRĀ² ratios of coronal and axial images in RECON1 and RECON2 are 1.33 and 1.15, implying that the coronal image has a better detectability than axial image. In other words, using coronal slices for the small target detection can reduce the patient dose about 33% and 15% compared to using axial slices in RECON 1 and RECON 2.

Conclusion:In this work, we investigated slice direction dependent detectability of a volumetric cone beam CT image. RECON 1 and RECON 2 produced the highest detection-SNR, with better detectability in coronal slices. These results indicate that it is more beneficial to use coronal slice to improve detectability of a small target in a volumetric cone beam CT image.

Funding Support, Disclosures, and Conflict of Interest: This research was supported by the MSIP (Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning), Korea, under the IT Consilience Creative Program (NIPA-2014-H0201-14-1002) supervised by the NIPA (National IT Industry Promotion Agency). Authors declares that s/he has no conflict of Interest in relation to the work in this abstract.


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