医学
成像体模
磁共振成像
能见度
核医学
断层摄影术
放射科
射线照相术
计算机断层摄影术
光学
物理
作者
Jan Oliver Voß,Christian Doll,Jan D. Raguse,Benedicta Beck‐Broichsitter,Thula Walter,Johannes Kahn,Georg Böning,Christoph Maier,Nadine Thieme
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ejrad.2020.109505
摘要
Abstract
Purpose
To evaluate the effectiveness of plain radiography (X-ray. XR), computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MR) in visualising commonly seen foreign bodies. A special focus was put on objects relevant to head and neck surgery. Method
Thirty-four commonly encountered objects of different compositions including wood, plastic, and glass were embedded in a gelatin gel phantom and imaged using XR, CT and MR. The success rates of radiologists in detecting and correctly identifying the foreign objects were evaluated. Subjective visibility was rated on a 4-point Likert scale. Objective visibility was analysed using region of interest-based contrast for CT. Results
Sensitivity in foreign bodies detection was highest in MR (97.1 %) followed by CT (86.0 %) and x-ray (61.8 %). Success rates for the correct identification of the objects and material types were highest in MR (33.3 % and 39.2 %, respectively) followed by CT (25.5 % for both) and XR (16.7 % and 15.7 %). Overall, subjective visibility was rated higher in CT and MR imaging ("good visibility"), as compared to XR ("poor visibility"). Interreader agreement was high across modalities (Kendall's W = 0.935, 0.834 and 0.794 for XR, MR and CT, respectively). Conclusions
Detection and identification of non-ferromagnetic objects was most successful in MR followed by CT imaging in this experimental setup.
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