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CT Registry Exam Study Guide – Comprehensive Computed Tomography Review for ARRT Certification (Updated 2025 Edition)

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CT Registry Exam Study Guide – Comprehensive Computed Tomography Review for ARRT Certification (Updated 2025 Edition)

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CT REGISTRY-

how do you reduce beam hardening - Answer: 1. Increase dose

2. Reduce collimation--Reduce slice thickness

3. Increase window width



At what level does the abdominal aortal bifurcate? - Answer: L4



What is the typical scan delay after injection of contrast media for studies of the liver? - Answer:
30-45 seconds



What window settings provide the best tissue differentiation within the liver? - Answer: window
width= 140, level= 60



What is the window settings that provide the best bone window for the pelvis? - Answer:
window width=2000, window level=350



What mAs is typically used in routine CT exams of the abdomen? - Answer: 200-300 mAs



What is the result of the bifurcation of the abdominal aorta? - Answer: The right and left
common iliac arteries



What is the anode target angle? - Answer: 12 degrees



At what level do the common carotids bifurcate into the internal and external carotid arteries? -
Answer: C3-C4



The floor of the orbit is formed by the __________ bones. - Answer: maxillary and zygomatic

,CT REGISTRY-


The lateral wall of the orbit is formed by the ___________ bones. - Answer: zygomatic and
sphenoid



The medial wall of the orbit is formed by the _________ bones. - Answer: ethmoid and lacrimal
bones



how do you calculate effective mAs? - Answer: mAs/pitch



define window level and window width - Answer: LEVEL: a chosen midpoint in the grayscale



WIDTH: number of grayscale values above and below the level.

- The width is DIVIDED in HALF and distributed above and below the level.

- Anything above the window is white

- Anything below the window is black



The wider the window the more grayscale values, the lower the contrast!



example:

Level 100, Width 300

White = >+250

Black = <-50



Level 100, Width 200

White = >+200

,CT REGISTRY-

Black = <0



Level 100, Width 150

White = >+175

Black = <25



factors that affect spatial and contrast resolution - Answer: Spatial resolution:

1) focal spot

2) detector width (aperture)

3) reconstruction algorithm - bone>soft tissue

4) slice thickness - thinner is better

5) pixel/FOV/matrix

6) pitch - decreased pitch means no gaps

7) nyquist limitations



Contrast resolution: CNR

1) energy of X-rays - kVp - ↑ kVp ↓ contrast

2) number of X-rays - mA - ↑ mA ↓ mottle

3) slice thickness - thicker is better

4) reconstruction method - iterative > filtered

5) reconstruction algorthith - soft tissue>bone



Give window levels for brain, lung, abdomen, bone - Answer: Brain: W80,L+40

Lung: W1500, L-400

Abdomen: W400, L+50

, CT REGISTRY-

Bone: W1600, L+500



What is beam hardening?

what are the two types of beam hardening artifact?

how do you compensate for it? - Answer: 1) as the X-ray beam passes through an object, lower
energy photons are removed (like filtration!) leaving a "harder beam" of high energy photons.
This causes two artifacts:



2) Cupping: the center of a round object is darker than the periphery due to hardening of the
beam 360 degrees around the object. happens in the head



3) Streak: these are dark bands that occur in between two dense objects - nearly all the photons
are removed in a line between the two objects



4) fixes:

A) Filtration: pre-hardening the beam to remove low energy photons

B) Calibration: using a phantom to set a compensated mA/kVp

C) Correct software: iterative reconstruction may help

D) Avoidance: tilting the gantry of positioning the patient to avoid areas that may cause
hardening.



ring artifact - Answer: Calibration error or defective detector cause consistently erroneous
reading at each angular position, resulting in a circular artifact



is the focal spot large or small? - Answer: large 0.6-1.2 - so as not to overheat the anode from
such a high mA

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