Abstract

To evaluate a reduced iodine volume protocol for lower extremity CT angiography (CTA) using dual-energy CT (DECT). This retrospective study included consecutive patients who underwent lower extremity CTA from June to December 2022. A 10 ml 1:1 mixed test bolus was performed, followed by a 40 ml full bolus at a 2.5/s injection rate, using 400 mg/ml iodine contrast media. Conventional and 40 keV virtual monoenergetic images (VMI) were reconstructed. For both reconstructions, five main artery segments were assessed with a 3-point image quality score as well as quantitative attenuation, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) measurements with diagnostic quality thresholds (respectively >150 HU and >3). Forty patients were included in the study (mean age 68 ± 12 yo). 200 artery segments were assessed. Median qualitative image scores were 3 [IQR, 3, 3] for both reconstructions. 40 keV VMI upgraded qualitative scores for 51 (26%) of patients, including 9 (5%) from nondiagnostic to diagnostic quality. 40 keV VMI obtained attenuation and CNR diagnostic quality for respectively 100% and 100% of segments, compared with 96% and 98% for conventional images (p < 0.001). Distal artery segments showed the most differences between 40 keV VMI and conventional images. A low-iodine lower extremity CTA protocol is feasible, with 40 keV virtual monoenergetic spectral reconstruction enabling maintained diagnostic image quality at the distal artery segments.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call