Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4244351 | Médecine Nucléaire | 2011 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Hybrid imaging, particularly positron emission tomography (PET) combined with CT has emerged in the field of oncology as a modality of choice. The concomitant realization of a standard CT examination, however, raises the question of the additional dose delivered to the patient. This radiation burden could be avoided by performing a single PET/CT examination with injection of contrast media. To verify the potential dosimetric gain of this strategy, we compared the effective dose associated with each modality in a retrospective cohort of 151 patients, homogeneous in weight and size. The average effective dose for a PET/CT (injection of 5-6Â MBq/kg of 18FDG) was 13.5Â mSv, the CT dose representing approximately 80% of the PET dose. In our study, the average effective dose in CT thorax/abdomen/pelvis was 21.4Â mSv, 60% higher than the PET/CT effective dose.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Radiology and Imaging
Authors
J. Coulot, F. Magnier, P. Chauchat, N. Guilabert, M. Ricard, S. Dreuil, J. Lumbroso,