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QC Radiologic Technology

1) Quality control in diagnostic radiology through regular testing helps improve clinical results, maintain standards of care, and minimize risks like high radiation dose. 2) Key quality control tests include acceptance testing when new equipment is installed, annual inspections, and daily/weekly checks by technologists on factors like mechanical integrity, radiation output consistency, and automatic exposure control. 3) Maintaining quality involves a team approach, promptly addressing any issues, focusing tests on the most important safety and image quality factors, and going beyond just regulatory requirements. Regular quality control is important for patient and staff safety.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
83 views20 pages

QC Radiologic Technology

1) Quality control in diagnostic radiology through regular testing helps improve clinical results, maintain standards of care, and minimize risks like high radiation dose. 2) Key quality control tests include acceptance testing when new equipment is installed, annual inspections, and daily/weekly checks by technologists on factors like mechanical integrity, radiation output consistency, and automatic exposure control. 3) Maintaining quality involves a team approach, promptly addressing any issues, focusing tests on the most important safety and image quality factors, and going beyond just regulatory requirements. Regular quality control is important for patient and staff safety.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Quality Assurance In Diagnostic

Radiology

Robert G. Gould, Sc.D.


Professor and Vice Chair
Department of Radiology
University of California
San Francisco, California

Why Do Quality Control?

•  Improve clinical results


•  Preempt quality or safety problems
•  Maintain standard of care
•  Minimize patient radiation dose
•  Satisfy government regulations

1

QC Testing
•  Acceptance testing
–  Upon installation prior to patient use
–  Medical physicist
•  Annual inspection
–  Medical physicist
–  Equipment vendor/service provider
•  Daily and weekly tests
–  QC technologist

Quality Control (QC)


•  Team approach
–  Radiologists, Medical Physicists,
Technologists
•  Use eyes and experience
•  Don’t “work around” problems
•  Try to be preemptive

2

Mechanical Integrity

•  Fix problems as soon as possible


–  They only get worse
•  If things become loose, tighten them!

Regulations
•  Are more better?
•  Are all of equal value?
•  Do they cover all aspects of IQ and
safety?
–  Should I stop when all the regulatory tests
are complete?

3

Quality Control
•  Emphasize those tests that are
important to IQ and/or safety
–  Concentrate on those functions that effect
quality and safety
–  Minimize time on activities done primarily
to meet regulations

Digital Projection Imaging: QC


X-ray tube!

Collimator!

X-rays!

Patient!

Grid!
Detector!

4

X-Ray Tube Concerns
•  Focal spot size
–  Component in spatial resolution
•  Worn anode
–  Variation in intensity across field
–  Increase in HVL due to metal coating on
inside of glass
•  Instabilities, arching

Focal Spot Measurement

•  When?
–  Acceptance
–  Annually
–  Tube replacement
•  How?
–  Star pattern-measure spatial
resolution
–  Pinhole camera

5

Spatial Resolution Measurement
•  Image a lead bar
test pattern
•  Assess using vendor
QC software to
determine contrast
of specific line pairs
–  MTF can be obtained
•  Determine along
both axis or at an
angle of 45°

Pinhole Camera

•  The best Focal spot, F



–  Shows emission distribution L1

–  Difficult and time
consuming Pinhole

–  Not possible for some tubes


•  Use CR and large L2

magnification factor (≥ 5x) Image, S

•  Careful alignment Detector

F = S (L1/L2)
= S [1/(M-1)]

6

Generator QC
•  Consistent x-ray output for same
technical factors (KVp, mA, exposure
time)
•  mA and time settings
–  Should be linear
–  Should be consistent
–  mR/mAs should be a constant
•  KVp calibration

Collimators
•  Restrict primary X-ray beam to
detector size or a smaller
anatomic region-of-interest Tube housing

•  Restriction and alignment X-ray tube



of X-ray beam to detector Collimator

Added
•  Major component in radiation filtration

protection Light

Mirror

•  Reduces scatter

X-rays

•  Lower personnel exposure

Patient

•  Improved image quality

•  Reduction in patient radiation Grid

burden Detector

•  Component in beam filtration

7

Collimator
•  What?
–  X-ray field - detector alignment
–  X-ray - light field alignment
•  When?
–  Acceptance
–  Annually
–  Tube replacement

X-ray - Light Field Alignment

•  Sum on opposite
sides < 2% of the
source-image
distance (SID) Mirror

Light

D

source

D

8

Filtration

•  Minimum amount set by


regulation
•  Determined by measuring
the HVL

Intensity
Peak tube

–  Thickness required to Potential

reduce X-ray intensity to
half its initial value
–  Measured in mm of Al
–  Measure of X-ray beam 0 20
40 60 80 100 120

penetrance (hardness) Energy, KeV

Filtration/Beam Quality
Tube Minimum
•  Indicated by
measuring half Potential, HVL,
KVp Mm Al
value layer (HVL)
•  Need to measure at 50 1.5
only a single KVp 71 2.1
–  Tube potential
indication should be 80 2.3
calibrated 100 2.7
120 3.2

9

Filtration
•  Current digital R/F and angio systems
have variable filtration
–  Combinations of Al and Cu of various
thicknesses
–  Anatomic protocols automatically change
•  Measure HVL at minimum filtration

Basic Imaging Geometry: Detector

Tube housing

•  Converts X-ray intensity to X-ray tube

electrical signal Collimator

Added
•  Major component of spatial filtration

resolution Light

•  Major determinate of patient Mirror

dose X-rays

•  Component of automatic Patient

exposure control system
Grid

Detector

10

Digital Detectors: Radiography
•  What?
–  Uniformity
–  Artifacts
–  AEC
•  When?
–  Acceptance
–  Annually
–  Component replacement
–  Manufacturers recomendation

Digital Detectors: Flat Field Uniformity

•  Digital detectors do not


respond uniformly across field
–  Produces density variations
within the image
–  ‘Structured’ noise
•  Assessed by uniformity of pixel
values (eg. Mean and
standard deviation)
•  Most systems have software Mean,

that automates testing standard deviation

11

Digital Detector Structured Noise
Normalized “flat-field”
correction matrix

“Flat field”
algorithm

Flat-field “corrected” image

Raw image

•  Periodically generate new correction


matrix
–  Follow manufacturers recommendation
–  Often done by technologist

Digital Detectors: Artifacts

•  Non-uniformities
•  Dropouts and dead pixels
•  Determined by imaging uniform plastic
block
–  View with narrow W/L

12

Automatic Exposure Control (AEC)

•  Should be able to maintain a pixel mean


value within ~15%
–  Track with changes in KVp
•  Clinically used range (~ 50 - 120 KVp)
–  Track with changes in patient thickness
•  5 - 35 cm of water equivalent

Annual Testing - Key Measurements

•  Mechanical integrity
•  Linearity of mAs
•  Half value layer
•  X-ray field - detector size
•  Light - x-ray field alignment
•  Spatial resolution
•  Artifacts/uniformity
•  AEC consistency

13

Fluoroscopy QC

•  What?
–  Table-top exposure rate
–  Automatic brightness control
•  When?
–  Installation
–  Annually
–  Major component changes
–  Manufacturer’s recommendation

Typical Regulations
Fluoroscopic Equipment
•  Table-top exposure rate cannot exceed 10
R/min
•  During routine fluoroscopy the table-top
(patient entrance) exposure rate shall not
exceed 5 R/min for a typical patient
• Determined by use of a phantom equivalent to
8” of water

14

Automatic ExposureControl (AEC)
•  Feedback mechanism that attempts to maintain a
constant brightness level from the center portion of the
output screen
–  center weighted exposure meter
–  adjusts the X-ray technique factors (mA and/or KV)
•  Determinate in patient dose

Fluctuating patient entrance dose! Constant input exposure!


Constant
light level!

X-ray tube!
+ KV! Patient! Image intensifier!
+ mA!
Feedback loop!

Automatic Exposure Control


•  For a given object size, should require
same kVp and mA
•  California:
–  8 inch plastic (lucite) phantom
–  12 inch table-top to entrance surface
distance
–  6.25 x 6.25 inch field at table-top
–  Record kVp and mA weekly

15

Fluoroscopy - Image Quality
•  Image resolution pattern
–  Bar pattern (line pairs/ mm)
•  Contrast sensitivity
–  Low contrast phantom

Problem: very subjective


Computed Tomography QC
•  What?
–  Dose
–  Slice thickness/sensitivity profile
–  Table incrementation accuracy
–  Image quality factors
•  When?
–  Installation
–  Annually
–  Major component changes
–  Manufacturer’s recommendation

16

Image Quality CT
•  Uniformity
•  Artifacts
•  Linearity
•  Noise
•  Spatial resolution
•  Contrast sensitivity AAPM phantom

CT Dose Measurements
•  CTDI
•  In air at isocenter (mR/mAs)
7.8  

7.8   4.3   7.8  

120  KVp  
100  mAs  
Cylindrical  PMMA   360°  rota<on   7.8  
64  slice  CT   Body  
 
32  cm  diameter

17

QC Challenges
•  Man-machine interfaces
–  What goes on in the software black box?
–  How to test?

Cedars-Sinai CT Overexposures
•  What happened?
•  Brain perfusion procedures
–  Used in stroke assessment
•  Over-rode ‘default’ protocol
settings
–  Protocols come with the
machine
–  Changed technique factors that
effect dose
•  Eight times the protocol dose

18

Cedars-Sinai CT Overexposure

•  Went on for 18 months because no one


made the association of hair loss and
skin reddening with CT procedure
–  2-3 weeks after exposure before onset of
hair loss

Cedars-Sinai CT Overexposure

•  Errors at multiple levels


–  Originally caused by changing default
protocol
–  Dose indicators appear at time of scan:
should have been recognized at time of
scan
–  Radiologist should have realized overdose
from the images
•  Not found during any QC testing

19

Conclusions
•  QC is a necessary and valuable aspect of
x-ray imaging
•  QC should be a meaningful endeavor not
just going through the motions
–  React to problems before they interfere with
patient images
•  Not all QC tasks are of equal value
–  Concentrate on the important ones (those
that effect patient safety and image quality)

20

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