Interactive Transcript
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How does Coronary CT compare to other modalities for
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radiation and what can we do to reduce radiation dose?
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I want to start talking about radiation, the units.
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The units used are known as sieverts,
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and they're actually a measure; it's a weighted
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measure of the effective radiation dose.
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Weighted because different parts of the body have
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different radiosensitivities and you don't want
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to just give the dose in terms of what's being
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given, but in a sense of what's being received.
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The received dose depends on the radio
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sensitivity, so it's weighted to make it
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comparable across modalities because there are
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some modalities which radiate the bone,
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some which radiate the abdomen, some which radiate
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the neck, so you want a uniform comparison.
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So how does it look?
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The background radiation is 3 millisieverts,
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a chest X-ray, which is very commonly done, is 0.04.
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21 00:01:03,705 --> 00:01:07,765 And coronary CT has been quoted as being 8 to 13.
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And I think these are slightly old figures.
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They're still the ones that I use more often,
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but I'm going to show you how that number has been
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drastically reduced through multiple mechanisms.
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And it's more important for us to understand
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those mechanisms and understand how we
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can reduce the radiation dose further.
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So two basic concepts are
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that of the tube current and the peak voltage; they're
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the ones that produce photons, and then those photons
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generated go through the body and hit the detector.
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So you have three components: you have the generation
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of the photons from the X-ray tube, you have
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the attenuation, the body stopping the photons,
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and then you have the detectors
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being scintillated by the photons.
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A simplistic way of looking at it is that the
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tube current determines the number of photons,
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the KVP determines the strength of the photons.
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So if you have an increase in your tube current,
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you'll have more photons and more radiation dose.
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If you have an increase in your KVP, you'll
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have more photons that go through; they're
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stronger and also increase the radiation dose.
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So how do we reduce the dose?
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I'd say that there are multiple methods
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and the most important, of course, has
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nothing to do with the acquisition.
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It's to make sure that the study is appropriate
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because the best way of reducing radiation is to
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make sure that the study done is clinically indicated
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and the information would change the management.
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That said, once the study has been
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done, think about the field of view.
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If you're only interested in the coronary arteries, you
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might want to just start at the main pulmonary artery.
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If you're interested in the whole chest, then obviously
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go further up, but don't just routinely go further up.
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Make some effort in understanding what the need is.
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An underutilized method is the KVP, which
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I'll get to on a couple of occasions.
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Lower the KVP, lower the radiation dose, and
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it's a quadratic relationship, not just a linear.
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But lower the KVP, higher the iodine
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attenuation, and higher the vascular contrast.
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There are two types of scanning:
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retrospective and prospective.
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With regularity of heart rates, improved
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detector width, and newer scanners,
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more often we can do prospective.
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We don't need to go to retrospective.
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But should you do retrospective, then there is the
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option of tube current modulation, where the tube
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current, which is on throughout the cardiac cycle,
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is dramatically reduced during the points where
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imaging is likely to be noisy because it's
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not diastole; so in systole, the tube current goes
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down dramatically, sometimes 20%, sometimes 2%.
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High-pitch imaging is another
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method, which I will talk about.
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It's basically using the latest technology to provide
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ECG-synchronized acquisitions in one heartbeat,
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taking advantage of two tubes at right angles.
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And then finally, there are reconstruction
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techniques, such as iterative reconstruction,
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which also slightly reduce the radiation dose.
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So, many of these can reduce radiation
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dose by a fair amount, like 40%.
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For example, lowering the KVP
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or tube current modulation.
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So the end result can be quite
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a bit of a dramatic difference.
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And right now, with the latest scanners, with
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attention to the patient details, with, um,
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tailoring the KVP to the patient's weight, you can
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get the dose down to less than 2 millisieverts.
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Reducing the KVP from 100 to 80 reduces
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the dose by 40%, because KVP is quadratic.
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The noise is proportional to multiple
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things, including the milliamperes.
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But here we don't see a constant relationship, because
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if you double the MAS, the KVP, you only increase
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the signal-to-noise ratio by 40%, so you don't have
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the same luxury as you do with reducing the KVP.
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Sometimes you do need to increase the MAS,
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but just bear in mind that the gains aren't
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as much as the gains from reducing KVP.
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Thank you.
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