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      Metal artifact reduction in CT, a phantom study: subjective and objective evaluation of four commercial metal artifact reduction algorithms when used on three different orthopedic metal implants.

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          Abstract

          Background Metal implants may introduce severe artifacts in computed tomography (CT) images. Over the last few years dedicated algorithms have been developed in order to reduce metal artifacts in CT images. Purpose To investigate and compare metal artifact reduction algorithms (MARs) from four different CT vendors when imaging three different orthopedic metal implants. Material and Methods Three clinical metal implants were attached to the leg of an anthropomorphic phantom: cobalt-chrome; stainless steel; and titanium. Four commercial MARs were investigated: SmartMAR (GE); O-MAR (Philips); iMAR (Siemens); and SEMAR (Toshiba). The images were evaluated subjectively by three observers and analyzed objectively by calculating the fraction of pixels with CT number above 500 HU in a region of interest around the metal. The average CT number and image noise were also measured. Results Both subjective evaluation and objective analysis showed that MARs reduced metal artifacts and improved the image quality for CT images containing metal implants of steel and cobalt-chrome. When using MARs on titanium, all MARs introduced new visible artifacts. Conclusion The effect of MARs varied between CT vendors and different metal implants used in orthopedic surgery. Both in subjective evaluation and objective analysis the effect of applying MARs was most obvious on steel and cobalt-chrome implants when using SEMAR from Toshiba followed by SmartMAR from GE. However, MARs may also introduce new image artifacts especially when used on titanium implants. Therefore, it is important to reconstruct all CT images containing metal with and without MARs.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Acta Radiol
          Acta radiologica (Stockholm, Sweden : 1987)
          SAGE Publications
          1600-0455
          0284-1851
          Sep 2018
          : 59
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] 1 Department of Oncology and Medical Physics, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway.
          [2 ] 2 Department of Radiology, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway.
          Article
          10.1177/0284185117751278
          29310445
          aa00d388-5b35-42c9-af80-2421de66ac36
          History

          Tomography,X-ray computed,algorithms,artifacts,diagnostic imaging,metals,orthopedic fixation devices,phantoms

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