Towards a more realistic anthropomorphic chest phantom using 3D‐printed and cork‐integrated components
Joost F. Hop, Ivan Dudurych, Thom R. G. Stams, Geertruida H. de Bock, Rozemarijn Vliegenthart, Marcel J. W. Greuter

TL;DR
Researchers improved a CT imaging phantom by adding 3D-printed and cork-based components to better mimic human lung anatomy and density.
Contribution
A modified anthropomorphic phantom with realistic 3D-printed bronchovascular structures and cork-based lung parenchyma was developed and validated.
Findings
The modified phantom's lung parenchyma attenuation closely matched human lung tissue (−854 HU vs. −872 HU).
Radiologists rated the modified phantom higher for anatomical realism compared to the unmodified version.
The bronchovascular insert showed lower attenuation than human vasculature (−41 HU vs. 42 HU).
Abstract
Thorax phantoms for computed tomography (CT) imaging often lack realistic lung parenchyma and bronchovascular anatomy. To improve anatomical accuracy, 3D‐printed chest phantoms have been developed as more realistic alternatives to existing models. To evaluate whether an in‐house developed anthropomorphic phantom insert realistically represents the anatomical structures and attenuation characteristics compared to the original phantom and human CT data. The anthropomorphic chest phantom “Lungman” was modified by integrating a 3D‐printed insert, cork‐based lung parenchyma, and lung nodules. The phantom was scanned on a CT system and evaluated using qualitative and quantitative CT analyses, comparing attenuation values and histogram distributions to human CT data. Subjective radiologist assessments were conducted to compare anatomical realism between the modified and unmodified phantom.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced X-ray and CT Imaging · Radiation Dose and Imaging · Medical Imaging Techniques and Applications
