Virtual monoenergetic imaging for metal artifact reduction in dental implant surgery using photon-counting detector computed tomography

  • Adib Al-Haj Husain*
  • , Victor Mergen
  • , Thomas Sartoretti
  • , Nadin Al-Haj Husain*
  • , Sebastian Winklhofer
  • , Hatem Alkadhi
  • , Bernd Stadlinger
  • , Harald Essig
  • , Silvio Valdec
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: This ex vivo study was performed to determine the optimal energy level for virtual monoenergetic images (VMIs) generated with photon-counting detector computed tomography (PCD-CT) to minimize metal artifacts from dental implants. Materials and Methods: Twelve implants from various manufacturers were placed in 6 pig mandibles and scanned with PCD-CT. VMIs were reconstructed at energy levels from 70 keV to 150 keV in 20-keV increments. Three readers with varying experience qualitatively assessed the image quality, artifact burden, and diagnostic interpretability of periimplant soft and hard tissues using a 5-point discrete visual scale. Objective analyses included quantitative line profile analysis of implant-induced artifacts. Descriptive statistics were calculated, and inter-reader agreement was assessed using percentage agreement and the Krippendorff alpha coefficient. Results: Qualitative analysis demonstrated excellent image quality for VMIs at >_110 keV (median = 5), with minimal artifacts observed at 130-150 keV. In contrast, lower-energy VMIs (70-90 keV) showed inferior performance due to artifact-related limitations in diagnostic interpretability. Inter-reader agreement ranged from moderate to perfect, with perfect reliability (alpha=1) for VMIs >_110 keV. Quantitative line-profile analysis confirmed reduced artifact burden at higher energy levels, particularly for VMIs >= 110keV. Conclusion: VMI at energy levels >_110 keV on PCD-CT reduced dental implant-related metal artifacts and offered excellent image quality, including assessment of both peri-implant soft and hard tissues. These findings suggest that optimized PCD-CT VMI may enhance postoperative follow-up imaging. Future in vivo studies are warranted to validate these findings in clinical practice. (Imaging Sci Dent 20250216)
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages11
JournalImaging Science in Dentistry
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2025

Keywords

  • Tomography
  • X-Ray Computed
  • Dental Implants
  • Artifacts
  • CT
  • TITANIUM
  • IMAGES
  • CBCT

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