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Abstract

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a single acquisition whole-body trauma multi-detector CT scan is able to reduce resuscitation time, scan time, and effective radiation dose without compromising diagnostic quality in the setting of polytrauma. Retrospective analysis of 33 trauma patients undergoing single acquisition whole-body CT with injury severity scores of >=16 was compared to 34 patients imaged with a segmented whole-body CT protocol. Time spent in the emergency department, effective radiation dose, image quality, and mortality rates were compared. The single acquisition group spent 53.7 % less time in the emergency department prior to imaging (p=0.0044) and decreased scanning time by 25 %. The protocol yielded a 24.5 % reduction in mean effective radiation dose (24.66 mSv vs. 32.67 mSv, p<0.0001). The image noise was similar in both groups. Standardized mortality ratios were comparable. The single acquisition protocol significantly reduces time spent in the emergency department by allowing faster imaging at a lower radiation dose while maintaining image quality. Other contributors to reduction in radiation dose include use of dual-source CT technology, removal of delayed CT intravenous pyelogram, and arm positioning.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Rapid imaging protocol in trauma: a whole-body dual-source CT scan
Author
Sedlic, Anto; Chingkoe, Christina M; Tso, David K; Galea-soler, Sandro; Nicolaou, Savvas
Pages
401-8
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Oct 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
10703004
e-ISSN
14381435
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1433077782
Copyright
Am Soc Emergency Radiol 2013