A Comparison of Effective doses for the 16, 64, and 128-slice Computed Tomography Scanners: A First Health Cluster Study in Riyadh

Objective: This study aimed to compare the effective doses among 16, 64, and 128-slice computed tomography (CT) scanners. Several strategies have been implemented to reduce the radiation dose from CT, including a low tube voltage, a high pitch protocol, automatic tube current modulation, and iterati...

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Main Authors: Mansour Al Moudi, Sultan Al Dosari, Abdullah Ibrahim Al Hussain, Mazen Abounassif
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2024-10-01
Series:Dr. Sulaiman Al Habib Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/DSHMJ.DSHMJ_65_24
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author Mansour Al Moudi
Sultan Al Dosari
Abdullah Ibrahim Al Hussain
Mazen Abounassif
author_facet Mansour Al Moudi
Sultan Al Dosari
Abdullah Ibrahim Al Hussain
Mazen Abounassif
author_sort Mansour Al Moudi
collection DOAJ
description Objective: This study aimed to compare the effective doses among 16, 64, and 128-slice computed tomography (CT) scanners. Several strategies have been implemented to reduce the radiation dose from CT, including a low tube voltage, a high pitch protocol, automatic tube current modulation, and iterative reconstruction algorithms. These strategies have reduced the radiation dose from the previously reported >20 mSv to <3–5 mSv or even <1 mSv. This study compared the radiation doses associated with routine CT scans performed using various multi-slice CT scanners. Materials and Methods: A total of 330 patients who underwent CT scans as part of their routine clinical diagnoses from December 4, 2018, to March 26, 2019, were screened cross-sectionally. CT scans were performed using 16-slice GE HealthCare BrightSpeed, 64-slice GE HealthCare Discovery CT750 HD, and 128-slice Siemens Healthineers SOMATOM Definition Flash CT scanner systems. The parameters considered in the analysis were age, sex, body region, scanner type (16, 64, and 128 slices), dose length product, and the estimated mean ED. The effective radiation dose was calculated using the dose length product and compared among the scanner types. Results: We evaluated the CT scans of 166 men (50.3%) and 164 women (49.7%) patients. Among the three types of CT scanners used, the 16-slice CT scanner had the highest effective radiation dose for brain (P = 0.024), paranasal sinus (P = 0.027), cervical spine (P = 0.04), chest (P < 0.001) and pelvis (P = 0.014). Conclusion: The 16-slice CT scanner has the highest effective radiation dose compared to the 64 and 128-slice scanners. When performing routine CT scans with low-end CT scanner systems, dose-reduction strategies should be considered.
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issn 2666-819X
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record_format Article
series Dr. Sulaiman Al Habib Medical Journal
spelling doaj-art-48284413e7df4f46be62f87ee1014f5b2025-08-21T05:04:10ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsDr. Sulaiman Al Habib Medical Journal2666-819X2590-33492024-10-016421021410.4103/DSHMJ.DSHMJ_65_24A Comparison of Effective doses for the 16, 64, and 128-slice Computed Tomography Scanners: A First Health Cluster Study in RiyadhMansour Al MoudiSultan Al DosariAbdullah Ibrahim Al HussainMazen AbounassifObjective: This study aimed to compare the effective doses among 16, 64, and 128-slice computed tomography (CT) scanners. Several strategies have been implemented to reduce the radiation dose from CT, including a low tube voltage, a high pitch protocol, automatic tube current modulation, and iterative reconstruction algorithms. These strategies have reduced the radiation dose from the previously reported >20 mSv to <3–5 mSv or even <1 mSv. This study compared the radiation doses associated with routine CT scans performed using various multi-slice CT scanners. Materials and Methods: A total of 330 patients who underwent CT scans as part of their routine clinical diagnoses from December 4, 2018, to March 26, 2019, were screened cross-sectionally. CT scans were performed using 16-slice GE HealthCare BrightSpeed, 64-slice GE HealthCare Discovery CT750 HD, and 128-slice Siemens Healthineers SOMATOM Definition Flash CT scanner systems. The parameters considered in the analysis were age, sex, body region, scanner type (16, 64, and 128 slices), dose length product, and the estimated mean ED. The effective radiation dose was calculated using the dose length product and compared among the scanner types. Results: We evaluated the CT scans of 166 men (50.3%) and 164 women (49.7%) patients. Among the three types of CT scanners used, the 16-slice CT scanner had the highest effective radiation dose for brain (P = 0.024), paranasal sinus (P = 0.027), cervical spine (P = 0.04), chest (P < 0.001) and pelvis (P = 0.014). Conclusion: The 16-slice CT scanner has the highest effective radiation dose compared to the 64 and 128-slice scanners. When performing routine CT scans with low-end CT scanner systems, dose-reduction strategies should be considered.https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/DSHMJ.DSHMJ_65_24computed tomography angiographydose length producteffective dosemillisievertmulti-slice computed tomography
spellingShingle Mansour Al Moudi
Sultan Al Dosari
Abdullah Ibrahim Al Hussain
Mazen Abounassif
A Comparison of Effective doses for the 16, 64, and 128-slice Computed Tomography Scanners: A First Health Cluster Study in Riyadh
Dr. Sulaiman Al Habib Medical Journal
computed tomography angiography
dose length product
effective dose
millisievert
multi-slice computed tomography
title A Comparison of Effective doses for the 16, 64, and 128-slice Computed Tomography Scanners: A First Health Cluster Study in Riyadh
title_full A Comparison of Effective doses for the 16, 64, and 128-slice Computed Tomography Scanners: A First Health Cluster Study in Riyadh
title_fullStr A Comparison of Effective doses for the 16, 64, and 128-slice Computed Tomography Scanners: A First Health Cluster Study in Riyadh
title_full_unstemmed A Comparison of Effective doses for the 16, 64, and 128-slice Computed Tomography Scanners: A First Health Cluster Study in Riyadh
title_short A Comparison of Effective doses for the 16, 64, and 128-slice Computed Tomography Scanners: A First Health Cluster Study in Riyadh
title_sort comparison of effective doses for the 16 64 and 128 slice computed tomography scanners a first health cluster study in riyadh
topic computed tomography angiography
dose length product
effective dose
millisievert
multi-slice computed tomography
url https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/DSHMJ.DSHMJ_65_24
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