Combining Coronary with Carotid and Cerebrovascular Angiography Using Prospective ECG Gating and Iterative Reconstruction with 256-slice CT
Objective To investigate the image quality and radiation dose of combined coronary and carotid/cerebrovascular angiography with ECG gating and iterative reconstruction using 256‐slice CT compared with the findings with the two examinations performed separately. Patients and Methods One hundred sixty...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Echocardiography (Mount Kisco, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2015-08, Vol.32 (8), p.1291-1298 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objective
To investigate the image quality and radiation dose of combined coronary and carotid/cerebrovascular angiography with ECG gating and iterative reconstruction using 256‐slice CT compared with the findings with the two examinations performed separately.
Patients and Methods
One hundred sixty‐five consecutive patients underwent a single‐injection single‐pass combination of coronary and carotid/cerebrovascular CT angiography (group A), coronary CT angiography alone (group B), or carotid/cerebrovascular CT angiography alone (group C). We assessed the image quality of the combined and separate examinations and calculated the respective effective radiation doses. We evaluated the differences in the proportions of image quality grade between the combination and single‐examination groups. Diagnostic performance of the combined scanning for detecting significant vascular stenosis has been compared with reference digital subtraction angiography (DSA) in the patient subgroup of group A.
Results
There was no significant difference in age, body mass index (BMI), or gender distribution among the 3 groups (all P > 0.05). But there was significant difference in scan length, DLP, and effective dose among the 3 groups (all P 0.05), while the effective radiation dose of carotid/cerebrovascular scanning in group A was significantly lower than that in group C (P 0.05). In a subgroup of group A of 30 patients with DSA, combined computed tomographic angiography successfully detected 56 coronary stenosis on per‐segment basis, and 62 stenosis on carotid and cerebral artery. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value (NPV) of coronary stenosis were 91.80%, 95.60%, 87.50% and 97.21%, respectively. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and NPV of carotid/cerebrovascular stenosis were 93.55%, 94.68%, 92.06% and 95.70%, respectively.
Conclusion
Combination of coronary and carotid/cerebrovascular angiography with 256‐slice CT scanner with prospective ECG gating and iterative reconstruction produces diagnostic‐quality images of the coronary, carotid, and cerebrovascular systems in a single examination, |
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ISSN: | 0742-2822 1540-8175 |
DOI: | 10.1111/echo.12830 |