Feasibility of opportunistic dental diagnostics in routine photon-counting CT examinations of the cervical spine
Stefan Sawall, Joscha Maier, Sinan Sen, Holger Gehrig, Ti-Sun Kim, Christian H. Ziener, Heinz-Peter Schlemmer, Stefan O. Schoenberg, Matthias F. Froelich, Marc Kachelrieß, Maurice Ruetters

TL;DR
This study shows that dental issues can be detected using routine CT scans of the cervical spine, potentially improving dental diagnostics.
Contribution
Demonstrates the feasibility of using photon-counting CT for opportunistic dental diagnostics in cervical spine imaging.
Findings
Opportunistic dental diagnostics using PCCT showed excellent image quality and reproducibility.
Dental pathologies were detected in 70% of patients, including caries, apical lesions, and bone loss.
PCCT could enable earlier detection of dental issues during routine cervical spine scans.
Abstract
This study evaluates the potential of routine clinical photon-counting computed tomography (PCCT) of the cervical spine for opportunistic dental diagnostics. Thirty-three patients undergoing routine PCCT were included in this study, with imaging performed at an average dose of 13 mGy. Images were reconstructed to a voxel size of 156 μm and a slice thickness of 0.4 mm. Quantitative image quality was assessed using the contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) between dental structures, while qualitative assessment of structures like enamel, dentine, root canals, and cortical bone was conducted by two experienced readers using a five-point scale. The inter-reader reproducibility and intra-class correlation coefficient were excellent (all > 0.947). CNRs ranged from 1.6 to 6.1 for all relevant contrasts, and qualitative scores were excellent for all dental structures. Dental pathologies were detected…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced X-ray and CT Imaging · Dental Radiography and Imaging · Medical Imaging Techniques and Applications
