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Imaging of the brain in polytraumatized patients comparing 64-row spiral CT with incremental (sequential) CT
- Source :
- European journal of radiology. 81(4)
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- Introduction Up to now, due to a better image quality, for brain imaging the substantially slower sequential examination mode has been preferred during CT in polytraumatized patients. We aimed to re-evaluate modern ultrafast 64-row spiral CT regarding image quality in brain imaging of polytraumatized patients. Methods In 30 polytraumatized patients, both 64-row spiral and sequential CT of the brain were performed within 24 h. Retrospectively, two radiologists subjectively evaluated the delineation of the internal capsule, the pons, the medial rectus muscle of the orbita, the differentiation of grey/white matter, and the extent of artifacts at the inner skull. Image noise was also evaluated objectively. Statistics were performed using Cohen's kappa and a two-sided t-test. Results Perfect or clear agreements were noted regarding the delineation of the inner skull, the medial rectus muscle, the internal capsule, and grey/white matter differentiation. Due to beam hardening artifacts at the level of the pons, no agreement and no superiority of one of the CT-methods was noted. No differences were obtained regarding the objective evaluation of image noise. Discussion Image quality is generally equivalent. Since 64-row spiral CT can substantially save examination time we recommend to perform a spiral examination of the brain in polytraumatized patients.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Internal capsule
Adolescent
Image quality
Sensitivity and Specificity
White matter
Young Adult
Neuroimaging
Image noise
medicine
Humans
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Spiral
Aged
business.industry
Multiple Trauma
Medial rectus muscle
Brain
Reproducibility of Results
General Medicine
Middle Aged
Skull
medicine.anatomical_structure
Brain Injuries
Female
Radiology
Nuclear medicine
business
Tomography, Spiral Computed
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18727727
- Volume :
- 81
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- European journal of radiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....07c0e1df257539fa7a7a25a1f4ac0aa0