In vivo CT dosimetry during CT colonography. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to develop a method of measuring rectal radiation dose in vivo during CT colonography (CTC) and assess the accuracy of size-specific dose estimates (SSDEs) relative to that of in vivo dose measurements. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thermoluminescent dosimeter capsules were attached to a CTC rectal catheter to obtain four measurements of the CT radiation dose in 10 volunteers (five men and five women; age range, 23-87 years; mean age, 70.4 years). A fixed CT technique (supine and prone, 50 mAs and 120 kVp each) was used for CTC. SSDEs and percentile body habitus measurements were based on CT images and directly compared with in vivo dose measurements. RESULTS: The mean absorbed doses delivered to the rectum ranged from 8.8 to 23.6 mGy in the 10 patients, whose mean body habitus was in the 27th percentile among American adults 18-64 years old (range, 0.5-67th percentile). The mean SSDE error was 7.2% (range, 0.6-31.4%). CONCLUSION: This in vivo radiation dose measurement technique can be applied to patients undergoing CTC. Our measurements indicate that SSDEs are reasonable estimates of the rectal absorbed dose. The data obtained in this pilot study can be used as benchmarks for assessing dose estimates using other indirect methods (e.g., Monte Carlo simulations).

published proceedings

  • AJR Am J Roentgenol

author list (cited authors)

  • Mueller, J. W., Vining, D. J., Jones, A. K., Followill, D., Johnson, V. E., Bhosale, P., Rong, J., & Cody, D. D.

citation count

  • 7

complete list of authors

  • Mueller, Jonathon W||Vining, David J||Jones, A Kyle||Followill, David||Johnson, Valen E||Bhosale, Priya||Rong, John||Cody, Dianna D

publication date

  • April 2014