AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compares two CEMRA protocols for evaluating peripheral arterial occlusive disease in 80 patients, focusing on diagnostic quality and clinical usefulness.
  • Protocol A involved a single injection of Gd-BOPTA while Protocol B used a hybrid approach with two injections, resulting in better visualization of the aortopedal vascular system in Protocol B.
  • The findings suggest that the hybrid CEMRA technique offers improved diagnostic outcomes, especially in the cruropedal region, due to reduced venous overlap compared to the conventional method.

Article Abstract

Purpose: In peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD), angiographic evaluation of the entire aortopedal arterial system is mandatory. In a randomized study, two different protocols of CEMRA were evaluated prospectively to compare their diagnostic quality and clinical usefulness.

Patients And Methods: 80 patients (males n = 60, females n = 20, median age = 70 years, diabetics n = 27) with PAOD were examined with a 1.5 T system (40 mT/m) using a dedicated phased array peripheral vascular coil. Protocol A consisted of a single injection of Gd-BOPTA with consecutive craniocaudal image acquisition and protocol B of two injections, with the first injection of Gd-BOPTA followed by image acquisition of the popliteocrural and pedal segments and the second injection followed by acquiring the aortoiliac and femoral segments (hybrid technique). The evaluation of the arterial system was directed to the iliac, femoral, popliteocrural and pedal arteries.

Results: The visualization of the entire aortopedal vascular system was of diagnostically good or satisfactory quality in 16 of 40 patients using protocol A and in 29 of 40 patients using protocol B (iliac 40 vs. 37, femoral 40 vs. 40, popliteocrural 35 vs. 37, pedal 16 vs. 29); without the pedal station the number increased to 35 of 40 patients for both protocols. The reason of diagnostic limitations was an arteriovenous overlap in 24 of 80 cases, with 19 of 40 cases for protocol A and 5 of 40 for protocol B, located exclusively in the cruropedal region.

Conclusion: Moving table hybrid CEMRA is superior to conventional technique in craniocaudal direction by producing less venous overlap of arteries and is especially more suitable for the diagnostic evaluation of the cruropedal region.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-2004-814664DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study compares two CEMRA protocols for evaluating peripheral arterial occlusive disease in 80 patients, focusing on diagnostic quality and clinical usefulness.
  • Protocol A involved a single injection of Gd-BOPTA while Protocol B used a hybrid approach with two injections, resulting in better visualization of the aortopedal vascular system in Protocol B.
  • The findings suggest that the hybrid CEMRA technique offers improved diagnostic outcomes, especially in the cruropedal region, due to reduced venous overlap compared to the conventional method.
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