I’m going to admit this up front, this article is extremely boring if read all at once. Please, the intention here is to create a reference. Lot’s of table and rote learning. I’m sorry. Good luck 😅

Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA) achieves high vascular contrast by removing background anatomy through temporal subtraction.

While this technique greatly enhances vessel visibility, it is also highly sensitive to any inconsistencies between the mask and live images. These inconsistencies lead to artefacts, which may mimic or obscure pathology. Understanding their physical causes allows radiologists and technologists to recognise and minimise them in practice.

I’ve separated the artefacts in four main categories: motion, contrast, detector and processing related.

Motion-related artefacts

The most common source of artefacts in DSA is motion between the mask and live images.
Even small positional shifts (as little as one pixel) can produce visible misregistration.

Type of motion Cause Appearance Correction / Prevention
Patient movement Voluntary movement, discomfort, coughing Double edges or “ghost” anatomy Patient immobilisation, short acquisition, breath-hold
Respiratory motion Thoracic or abdominal movement Periodic edge artefacts, misaligned diaphragm Suspend respiration during acquisition
Cardiac motion Pulsation of nearby vessels or mediastinum Blurring or alternating subtraction edges ECG gating (where available)
Table or equipment movement Mechanical instability Uniform shift of all structures System stabilisation, pixel shift correction
Pixel shift correction

Small translational misalignments can be corrected by digitally shifting the mask image in x and y directions until optimal alignment is achieved.

Remasking

If movement or early contrast contaminates the mask, a new frame from the same series can be redefined as the mask to regenerate a cleaner subtraction.

Contrast-related artefacts
Artefact Cause Appearance / Effect Prevention
Mask contamination Contrast enters field before mask acquisition Residual positive signal (vessel outline visible before injection) Acquire new mask or use remasking
Incomplete opacification Inadequate injection rate or catheter malposition Patchy vessel filling or apparent stenosis Adjust injector rate and catheter position
Reflux or turbulence High injection pressure Irregular enhancement or pseudo-lesions Optimise injection rate and pressure
Overexposure (saturation) Excessive contrast density or high mA Clipped signal, bright vessel cores with dark halos Reduce iodine concentration or exposure

Proper synchronisation of contrast delivery and exposure onset is critical for avoiding subtraction errors.

Detector and system artefacts

Even with optimal patient and contrast control, artefacts can arise from imperfections in the imaging chain.

Artefact Physical cause Appearance Correction / QA action
Lag / ghosting Residual charge in detector (especially a-Se systems) Faint persistence of previous image Calibration, short integration time
Veiling glare Internal light scatter within intensifier or detector Reduced contrast, diffuse haze Flat-field correction and calibration
Fixed-pattern noise Detector gain non-uniformity Checkerboard or “fixed” texture Gain map correction
Linearity error Saturation or non-linear response Residual bone or anatomy post-subtraction Detector recalibration
Processing artefacts

Post-processing and image enhancement can introduce artefacts if over-applied or misused.

Artefact Source Impact Avoidance
Excessive edge enhancement Over-sharpening filters Artificial vessel outlines or ringing artefacts Moderate enhancement only
Over-filtering Heavy temporal or spatial smoothing Loss of fine vascular detail Use adaptive filters tuned to flow rate
Improper pixel shift Misaligned correction Worsened artefacts or ghosting Verify alignment before applying shift
Dynamic range compression Display scaling Flattened greyscale or contrast loss Adjust gamma and window levels appropriately
Key takeaways and exam tips:
  • Motion is the most common cause of artefacts; corrected by pixel shift or remasking.
  • Mask contamination and contrast timing errors produce false-positive vascular signals.
  • Detector artefacts (lag, veiling glare, non-uniformity) degrade contrast; QA prevents recurrence.
  • Over-processing can create false vessel edges or blur fine detail.
  • DSA is inherently sensitive to motion, dose, and timing.
  • Common exam question: “List the common artefacts encountered in DSA, explain their causes, and outline how they can be minimised or corrected.”
Up next

Next, we’ll move on to Image Quality and Noise in DSA, which will examine the major determinants of image quality (including subtraction noise propagation, temporal resolution, and the trade-off between SNR and dose) with strategies for optimisation.

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X-ray physics notes: