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Comparative Study
. 1994 Nov;193(2):419-22.
doi: 10.1148/radiology.193.2.7972756.

Evaluation of the injured cervical spine: comparison of conventional and storage phosphor radiography with a hybrid cassette

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Comparative Study

Evaluation of the injured cervical spine: comparison of conventional and storage phosphor radiography with a hybrid cassette

A J Wilson et al. Radiology. 1994 Nov.

Abstract

Purpose: To compare conventional and storage phosphor radiography of the injured cervical spine.

Materials and methods: Sixty-five patients underwent imaging in a supine position while wearing a cervical collar. Matched storage phosphor and conventional lateral cervical spine radiographs were obtained with an 18 x 24-cm hybrid cassette. Edge-enhanced and nonenhanced copies of each computed radiograph were printed on film, and the images were sent via a computer network to a remote imaging workstation. Four radiologists read the conventional radiographs, the two hard-copy computed radiographs, and the soft-copy images and used a binary scale to score the visibility of bone and soft-tissue structures.

Results: All readers scored better in all areas with computed radiographs, and a statistically significant (P = .030) improvement in performance was seen for soft-tissue structures.

Conclusion: Storage phosphor imaging offers advantages over conventional radiography, and digital images may be a viable alternative to film.

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