|
Stanford International Symposium 2008
May 14, 2008
Dual-energy CT catches subtleties of pancreatic masses
Shalmali Pal
Faster and better visualization are the main reasons to use dual-energy CT for the assessment of pancreatic masses, according to a presentation at the Stanford International Symposium on Multidetector-Row CT in Las Vegas. Dr. Anno Graser, currently a fellow in the radiology department at New York University Medical Center, outlined the main advantages dual-energy CT provides:
Graser offered a brief explanation of how each of these elements can help pinpoint early-stage masses. Color coding of the images, for example, draws immediate attention to the areas of mass enhancement. Dual-energy CT clarifies subtle enhancement between masses and normal body of pancreas, based on differences in attenuation. Virtual unenhanced images can be used to quantify enhancement patterns. Grasser also mentioned other advanced visualization options with dual-energy CT. "You can use these (dual-energy) data sets to create curved planar reformatting and 3D image volume rendering, looking at venous anatomy with greater clarity," he said. Finally, assessing vascular anatomy and involvement is important when deciding if a patient is a candidate for surgical resection, he said. At the University of Munich in Germany, Graser and colleagues has reported successful results with dual-energy CT for characterizing renal and ureteral stones. In a paper published in Investigative Radiology, they scanned 24 renal calculi, using dual-energy properties to differentiate between uric acid and other calculi (2008;43:2:112-119).The scan parameters were:
According to the results, uric acid, cystine, struvite, and mixed renal calculi could be differentiated from other types of stones on dual-energy CT scans. This type of information can guide patients into pharmacological treatment rather than surgery or shockwave therapy, the authors said.
Videos
GE unveils ultra-premium CT The new LightSpeed CT750 HD from GE Healthcare promises a 33% contrast improvement in the body and 47% in the heart, while cutting dose in the body by as much as half. The most significant change, however, may come from the product's ability to acquire data at more than 101 different energy levels, using an approach GE calls spectral imaging. Dominic Smith, GE's general manager of molecular imaging and CT marketing and advanced applications, describes this new capability. Greg Freiherr has the story.
Stanford MCDT workstation faceoff Seven companies went toe-to-toe in the Stanford MCDT workstation faceoff, their systems driven by 14 radiologists navigating four cases. It was three hours of intense interpretations, packaged into five-minute blocks stacked end to end. Greg Freiherr winds it up in the fastest 90 seconds in radiology.
AquilionOne Vegas protocol focuses on patient handling Patient throughput makes or breaks an imaging center. At the Spring Valley Imaging Center, one of several in the Nevada Imaging Centers group in Las Vegas, the third U.S. installation of the AquilionOne is being groomed for volume, in terms of not only data acquisition but patients as well. The center is doing advanced studies in the brain and heart but also every routine CT scan possible. Greg Freiherr has the story.
What's New on DiagnosticImaging.com
CT colonography tops colonoscopy for mapping colon cancer segmentation
Diagnostic Imaging, November 20, 2009 Self-referral provision may sugarcoat bitter pills in House reform
Diagnostic Imaging, November 19, 2009 |
|

