Purpose: To evaluate vessel assessment in virtual monoenergetic images (VMI) and virtual-non-contrast images (VNC) derived from venous phase spectral detector computed tomography (SDCT) acquisitions in comparison to arterial phase and true non-contrast (TNC) images.
Methods: Triphasic abdominal SDCT was performed in 25 patients including TNC, arterial and venous phase. VMI and VNC were reconstructed from the venous phase and compared to conventional arterial-phase images (CI), TNC and conventional venous-phase images (CI). Vessel contrast and virtual contrast removal were analyzed with region-of-interest-based measurements and in a qualitative assessment.
Results: Quantitative analysis revealed no significant attenuation differences between TNC and VNC in arterial vessels (p-range 0.07-0.47) except for the renal artery (p = 0.011). For venous vessels, significant differences between TNC and VNC were found for all veins (p < 0.001) except the inferior vena cava (p = 0.26), yet these differences remained within a 10 HU range in most patients. No significant attenuation differences were found between CI/VMI in arterial vessels (p-range 0.06-0.86). Contrast-to-noise ratio provided by VMI and CI was equivalent for all arterial vessels assessed (p-range 0.14-0.91). Qualitatively, VMI showed similar enhancement of abdominal and pelvic arteries as CI and VNC were rated comparable to TNC.
Conclusion: Our study suggests that VNC and VMI derived from single venous-phase SDCT offer comparable assessment of major abdominal vessels as provided by routine triphasic examinations, if no dynamic contrast information is required.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8215039 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00261-021-03001-2 | DOI Listing |
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