Photon-counting CT for bullet material differentiation: applications in forensic radiology
Benedikt M. Schaarschmidt, Jan Hegmanns, Jörg Wulff, Viktor Haase, Sebastian Faby, Felix Baum, Christian Bäumer, Sebastian Zensen, Johannes Haubold, Benno Hartung

TL;DR
Photon-counting CT can distinguish between lead and brass bullets in forensic and clinical settings using energy threshold images.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that photon-counting CT can noninvasively differentiate bullet materials using dual-energy indices.
Findings
Significant differences in dual-energy indices were observed between lead and brass bullets at the 20/90 keV threshold.
Photon-counting CT shows promise for noninvasive bullet material identification in forensic and clinical applications.
Differences in HU mean and max values were statistically significant for lead versus brass bullets.
Abstract
Gunshot deaths due to homicide or military encounters are a major health concern. Noninvasive bullet characterization is of major importance for patients with lodged bullets or in mass disasters with multiple cadavers, which must be prioritized for autopsy. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate whether brass and lead bullets can be differentiated using photon-counting CT (PCCT). Nine different lead (n = 6) or brass (n = 3) bullets were investigated on a state-of-the-art PCCT using a clinically unavailable research mode. Here, four image sets were reconstructed for different energy thresholds (20, 55, 72, 90 keV). Three circular regions of interest were placed on the 20-keV threshold images by two readers and automatically copied to the three other threshold images. Based on measured HU mean and max values, dual-energy indices (DEI) were calculated for the low/high energy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced X-ray and CT Imaging · Radiation Dose and Imaging · Autopsy Techniques and Outcomes
