Rationale And Objectives: Pulmonary CTA is the current standard method to assess for suspected pulmonary embolism. In some instances, the test results in low confidence interpretations. Our purpose was to compare the diagnostic confidence for three different scan protocols.
Materials And Methods: Pulmonary CTA images from 401 patients were retrospectively analyzed. 202 studies used a tube voltage of 120 kVp and a contrast injection rate of 4 cc/s, 99 studies 120 kVp and 5 cc/s, and 100 studies 100 kVp and 4 cc/s. The level of diagnostic confidence was extracted from the final clinical reports. For each study, attenuation of the pulmonary artery, image noise, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and radiation dose were compared.
Results: The 120 kVp, 5 cc/s protocol resulted in high diagnostic confidence in 84% of cases, more than with the 120 kVp, 4cc/s (65%) and the 100 kVp protocol (65%, p < 0.004). The 100 kVp protocol had a lower radiation dose, higher image noise, lower SNR, but equal and higher attenuation values of the pulmonary artery.
Conclusion: The reduction of tube voltage to 100 kVp at 4 cc/s maintains diagnostic confidence with lower radiation exposure, but does not equal the higher confidence achieved with 120 kVp at 5cc/s.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.acra.2021.01.020 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!