Perform this test to see if the CR’s ability to visualize
scale of contrast is comparable to the initial baseline image. You can evaluate the contrast for hard copy
film, the CR QC station, and the radiologist’s reading station.
Procedure:
- Erase your dedicated test IP
- Place a lead apron on the floor of your x-ray room (use same room that baseline image was performed in)
- Place test IP on lead apron
- Place phantom on cassette (same orientation as baseline image)
- Raise the x-ray tube to maximum height, center, and open collimation about 1" past edges of test IP
- Use the same technical factors that produced the baseline image (check monthly log for exposure factors) and make an exposure
- Annotate exposure indicator number and which CR reader was used
- Visually compare the contrast
areas on the new exposure of the phantom with the contrast areas on the
baseline image in your archive (*note – the brightness and contrast
settings on your viewing monitors should be the same as when the baseline
image was evaluated)
The
contrast area on the left (for my phantom) consists of two circles of Pb (lead)
equivalent material. The outer circle is
0.15 mm Pb, while the inner is 0.5 mm Pb.
The contrast area on the right consists of an empty hole, while the inner circle is made of 0.7 mm Cu (copper).
The contrast area on the right consists of an empty hole, while the inner circle is made of 0.7 mm Cu (copper).
A
simple visual comparison is enough to determine a pass/fail result. Keep a few things in mind when looking at the
images:
The
monitors will degrade over time, which can provide some display
inconsistency. It is advised to observe
both the QC monitor and the radiologist’s monitor for variation. If only one of the monitor’s display appears
to be sub-par, while the other appears optimum, consider replacing the sub-par
monitor. However, if both monitors
appear sub-par, it is more likely due to a reduced contrast performance of the
reader, and a service engineer should be notified.
If
you are comparing using hard-copy film, you can use a densitometer to get a
precise density difference measurement from each contrast area, comparing the
outer circles to the inner.
Other posts in this series:
CR Quality Control #1 - Screen Cleaning
CR Quality Control #2 - Creating a Baseline Phantom Image
CR Quality Control #3 - Exposure Indicator Calibration
CR Quality Control #4 - Contrast Evaluation
CR Quality Control #5 - Sharpness
CR Quality Control #6 - Shading Correction
CR Quality Control #7 - Laser Jitter
CR Quality Control #8 - Image Artifacts and Noise
CR Quality Control #9 - Exposure Linearity
CR Quality Control #10 - Residual Image Testing