Vascular attenuation and volumetric lung iodine density in dual-layer spectral CT pulmonary angiography: a randomized controlled trial comparing three contrast doses
摘要
To evaluate vascular attenuation (VA) in conventional and low-energy virtual monoenergetic images (LEVMI), volumetric lung iodine density (VID) and quality of CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA) in dual-layer detector spectral CT using three iodinated contrast medium (ICM) administration protocols.
Materials and methodsA prospective randomized single-center study including patients with CTPA to rule out pulmonary embolism (PE) was performed. Examinations were randomized to one of three ICM administration protocols: A, 40 mL at 4 mL/s; B, 30 mL at 3 mL/s; and C, 20 mL of ICM diluted with 20 mL of saline at 4 mL/s. Two radiologists evaluated the presence of PE, VA in conventional images and LEVMI, lung VID, perfusion defects detection, and quality of Z-effective maps. Statistical comparisons were performed between protocols.
ResultsFifty patients were randomized to each protocol. In conventional images, VA in pulmonary arteries was above 200 HU in more than 90% in protocols A and B, but only in 70% in protocol C. VA increased in LEVMI, with a minimum value of 269 HU. Differences in pulmonary VA with protocol C were statistically significant. At LEVMI, aortic attenuation was above 100 HU in most examinations. Protocol C presented the worst quality of iodine map and the lowest VID; however, it detected perfusion defects in all PE cases.
ConclusionThe use of LEVMI provides diagnostic VA levels in pulmonary arteries in all the protocols, and a minimum aortic enhancement in most cases. Even the lowest ICM dose maintains diagnostic iodine maps, although with lower quality and VID.
Key Points