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Combining gantry-free cone-beam computed tomography with iterative metal artefact reduction for surgical follow-up imaging of the appendicular skeleton

Theresa Sophie Patzer, Jan‐Peter Grunz, Henner Huflage, Nora Conrads, Simon Veldhoen, Jonas Schmalzl, Lenhard Pennig, Thorsten Alexander Bley, Karsten Sebastian Luetkens, Andreas Steven Kunz

Year
2022
Citations
6

Abstract

PURPOSE: Post-surgical evaluation of osteosynthesis material and adjacent tissue can be challenging in both radiography and cross-sectional imaging. This study investigates the performance of a multi-purpose X-ray scanner with cone-beam CT (CBCT) function and iterative metal artefact reduction capabilities in patients after osteoplasty of the appendicular skeleton. METHOD: Eighty individuals who underwent both conventional X-ray imaging and CBCT after osteoplasty of the hand/wrist (48), elbow (14), or ankle/foot (18) with the gantry-free twin robotic system were retrospectively enrolled. Radiological reports from clinical routine for both imaging modalities were retrospectively analyzed and compared with consensus expert reading by two musculoskeletal specialists serving as the standard of reference. Findings of screw dislocation or implant loosening, fragment displacement, and delayed healing were compared between X-ray and CBCT reports using the McNemar test. RESULTS: , respectively. Diagnostic accuracy for screw dislocation was superior in CBCT compared to standard radiograms (98.8 % vs 83.8 %; p = 0.002). Implant loosening (98.8 % vs 86.3 %; p = 0.006), fragment displacement (98.8 % vs 85.0 %; p < 0.001), and delayed healing (97.5 % vs 88.8 %; p = 0.016) were also more reliably detected in CBCT. Employing CBCT, postoperative complications were detected with a sensitivity and specificity of at least 95.8 % and 98.1 %, compared to 33.3 % and 92.86 % in radiography. CONCLUSIONS: With superior accuracy for various osteoplasty-related complications, the CBCT scan mode of a gantry-free twin robotic X-ray system with iterative metal artefact reduction aids post-surgical assessment in the appendicular skeleton.

Keywords

MedicineCone beam computed tomographyOsteoplastyRadiographyNuclear medicineRadiologyReduction (mathematics)ImplantComputed tomographySurgery

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