The a-SFC and the digital luminescence radiographs provide a significant gain in diagnostic information in the mediastinum without diminishing detail detectability in the lung fields and without additional radiation exposure.
Exposures of an anthropomorphic thorax phantom in posteroanterior projection were made using a focus-film distance of 200 cm and 125 kV with film-screen combinations in class 200 (Curix RP 1L/MR 200) and class 400 (Curix ST-L/Regular). Pathomorphological structures of the lung parenchyma of fine nodular, linear and reticular types were simulated by suitable materials. A ROC analysis including a t-test showed no significant difference in the evaluation of these structural details (p > 0.05). In order to describe image quality for the two film-screen systems, density curves, sigma D-curves and modulation transfer function (MTF) were determined. The only demonstrable difference was reduced MTF of 10-15% for the higher intensification film-screen combination with a resulting poorer resolution of 3.7 l/mm (for the 400 system) compared with 4.3 l/mm for the 200 system.
Asymmetric FSS improves chest diagnostics, because it yields significantly more diagnostic information in the mediastinum using equivalent x-ray exposure without reducing the image quality in the lung areas in respect of simulated pulmonary nodules.
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