Title of article :
Impact of Noise Level on the Accuracy of Automated Measurement of CT Number Linearity on ACR CT and Computational Phantoms
Author/Authors :
Anam ، Choirul Department of Physics - Faculty of Sciences and Mathematics - Diponegoro University , Amilia ، Riska Department of Physics - Faculty of Sciences and Mathematics - Diponegoro University , Naufal ، Ariij Department of Physics - Faculty of Sciences and Mathematics - Diponegoro University , Sutanto ، Heri Department of Physics - Faculty of Sciences and Mathematics - Diponegoro University , Dwihapsari ، Yanurita Department of Physics - Faculty of Science and Data Analytics - Institute Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember, Kampus ITS Sukolilo – Surabaya , Fujibuchi ، Toshioh Department of Health Sciences - Faculty of Medical Sciences - Kyushu University , Dougherty ، Geoff Department of Applied Physics and Medical Imaging - California State University Channel Islands
From page :
353
To page :
362
Abstract :
Background: Methods for segmentation, i.e., Full-segmentation (FS) and Segmentation-rotation (SR), are proposed for maintaining Computed Tomography (CT) number linearity. However, their effectiveness has not yet been tested against noise.Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the influence of noise on the accuracy of CT number linearity of the FS and SR methods on American College of Radiology (ACR) CT and computational phantoms.Material and Methods: This experimental study utilized two phantoms, ACR CT and computational phantoms. An ACR CT phantom was scanned by a 128-slice CT scanner with various tube currents from 80 to 200 mA to acquire various noises, with other constant parameters. The computational phantom was added by different Gaussian noises between 20 and 120 Hounsfield Units (HU). The CT number linearity was measured by the FS and SR methods, and the accuracy of CT number linearity was computed on two phantoms.Results: The two methods successfully segmented both phantoms at low noise, i.e., less than 60 HU. However, segmentation and measurement of CT number linearity are not accurate on a computational phantom using the FS method for more than 60-HU noise. The SR method is still accurate up to 120 HU of noise. Conclusion: The SR method outperformed the FS method to measure the CT number linearity due to its endurance in extreme noise.
Keywords :
ACR CT Phantom , Computational Phantom , Diagnostic Imaging , Image Quality Enhancement , Noise , CT Number Linearity , Computed Tomography Scanner , Quality of Health Care
Journal title :
Journal of Biomedical Physics and Engineering
Journal title :
Journal of Biomedical Physics and Engineering
Record number :
2742241
Link To Document :
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