Abstract Objectives To evaluate the effect of quaternary ammonium compound (QAC) disinfection on the radiographic image quality and chemical integrity of photostimulable phosphor (PSP) plates. Methods Radiographic image quality was assessed using two radiographs of an acrylic-block and two radiographs of an aluminum step-wedge acquired before disinfection and after ten groups with ten disinfections each. These radiographs were acquired with two PSP plates. Brightness, noise, uniformity, contrast and presence of artifacts were analyzed. Analysis of variance compared gray values between disinfections (α = 0.05). Chemical integrity was assessed using mid-infrared Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy on the PSP plates tube side, comparing disinfected plates with a non-disinfected control. Metal disk corrosion of the plates was visually inspected. Results Brightness decreased after 100 disinfections compared with radiographs obtained after 20 disinfections (p = 0.026). Uniformity increased for all disinfection groups compared with baseline radiographs (p 0.001). Radiographs obtained after 100 disinfections showed higher contrast than those acquired after 20 disinfections (p = 0.005). Noise did not differ (p 0.05). Artifacts were observed after 40 disinfections. FTIR analysis showed hydration followed by degradation of the PSP plates after 100 disinfections. Metal disk corrosion occurred after 10 disinfections. Conclusions QAC disinfection affected brightness, uniformity, contrast, produced artifacts, chemical changes and metal disk corrosion of the PSP plates. Advances in Knowledge This study is the first to assess the impact of disinfecting PSP plates with QAC. Results showed that QAC is not a viable option since its use produced changes in image quality and integrity degradation.
Costa et al. (Fri,) studied this question.