ABSTRACT
Japanese Society of Radiological Technology (JSRT) standard digital image database contains many useful cases of chest X-ray images, and has been used in many state-of-the-art researches. However, the pixel values of all the images are simply digitized as relative density values by utilizing a scanned film digitizer. As a result, the pixel values are completely different from the standardized display system input value of digital imaging and communications in medicine (DICOM), called presentation value (P-value), which can maintain a visual consistency when observing images using different display luminance. Therefore, we converted all the images from JSRT standard digital image database to DICOM format followed by the conversion of the pixel values to P-value using an original program developed by ourselves. Consequently, JSRT standard digital image database has been modified so that the visual consistency of images is maintained among different luminance displays.
Subject(s)
Radiology Information Systems , Technology, Radiologic/methods , Databases, Factual , Humans , Lung Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Societies, Scientific , SoftwareABSTRACT
Fifty posterior-anterior chest radiographs taken using an auto exposure control were evaluated in order to find an optimum determination method of the exposure index (EI). Four types of the relevant image regions were tested: (a) full image, (b) central 25% area, (c) full image excluding direct x-ray area, and (d) pulmonary area only, whereas four types of the value of interest (VOI) were adopted to each relevant image region: mean, median, mode, and middle. When the target EI was determined as the average of the 50 images, the deviation index (DI) was within ±1.0 only if pulmonary area was selected as the relevant image region, with the VOI of mean, median, and middle. This result strongly suggests that pulmonary area should be selected as the relevant image region of an EI when an auto exposure control is used.