PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

1024-pixel image matrix for chest CT - Impact on image quality of bronchial structures in phantoms and patients.

  • André Euler,
  • Katharina Martini,
  • Bettina Baessler,
  • Matthias Eberhard,
  • Friederike Schoeck,
  • Hatem Alkadhi,
  • Thomas Frauenfelder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234644
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. e0234644

Abstract

Read online

ObjectivesTo compare objective and subjective image quality of bronchial structures between a 512-pixel and a 1024-pixel image matrix for chest CT in phantoms and in patients.Materials and methodsFirst, a two-size chest phantom was imaged at two radiation doses on a 192-slice CT scanner. Datasets were reconstructed with 512-, 768-, and 1024-pixel image matrices and a sharp reconstruction kernel (Bl64). Image sharpness and normalized noise power spectrum (nNPS) were quantified. Second, chest CT images of 100 patients were reconstructed with 512- and 1024-pixel matrices and two blinded readers independently assessed objective and subjective image quality. In each patient dataset, the highest number of visible bronchi was counted for each lobe of the right lung. A linear mixed effects model was applied in the phantom study and a Welch's t-test in the patient study.ResultsObjective image sharpness and image noise increased with increasing matrix size and were highest for the 1024-matrix in phantoms and patients (all, P0.07) and the overall bronchial image quality between the two matrices (P>0.22).ConclusionOur study demonstrated superior image sharpness and higher image noise for a 1024- compared to a 512-pixel matrix, while there was no significant difference in the depiction and subjective image quality of bronchial structures for chest CT.