Abstract

Abstract Background Quantitative assessment of blood flow in peripheral extremities in conjunction with simultaneous CT angiography measurements can improve risk assessment and provide a critical decision-making tool for patients across a wide spectrum of vascular disease severity. Purpose This study assessed the reproducibility and accuracy of lower extremity blood flow measurements with a low-dose first-pass analysis CT perfusion technique. Materials and Methods This prospective study utilized 16 Yorkshire Swine to obtain lower extremity blood flow CT measurements at baseline and under induced femoral stenosis using a vascular occluder. Thirty-three pairs of CT measurements evaluated reproducibility, and 43 CT measurements assessed accuracy against ultrasound flow probe references. Contrast agent and saline chaser were both injected peripherally at a rate of 5 mL/s. Bolus tracking was used, and a pre-contrast and post-contrast helical scan were acquired at the base and approximately the peak of the femoral enhancement (CT angiogram), respectively. The acquired data were then used as analytical inputs into a first-pass analysis model to derive perfusion in mL/min/g. The reproducibility and accuracy of lower extremity perfusion measurements were assessed via Mixed model regression and Bland-Altman analysis. Results Calculated CT perfusion measurements derived from first-pass analysis technique (PCT), and the reference standard ultrasound perfusion measurements (Pref) were related by PCT = 1.06 Pref + 0.00 (r2= 0.90, Root-Mean-Square Error = 0.01 mL/min/g). The first (P1) and second (P2) CT perfusion measurements were related by P2 = 0.98 P1 + 0.02 (r = 0.97, Root-Mean-Square Error = 0.11 mL/min/g). The average effective dose of perfusion measurement using first-pass analysis technique was calculated to be only 2.13 mSv. Conclusion : The low-dose quantitative CT perfusion technique can accurately measure lower extremity perfusion (mL/min/g) using only two helical scans. The CT angiogram and perfusion measurements can be used as a comprehensive technique for morphological and physiological assessment of limb ischemia.

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