Abstract

The purpose of this study was to define objective criteria to calculate a tissue segmentation threshold for shaded surface display (SSD) rendering of the renal arteries with computed tomography angiography. Contrast-enhanced spiral CT scans were obtained through the renal arteries of nine patients. Six sets of SSD images were rendered for each patient with lower threshold values ranging from 80 to 130 Hounsfield units (HU) by increments of 10 HU. Visceral organ enhancement was measured in the aorta, liver, spleen, pancreas, and kidney. The segmentation threshold for each patient was determined by evaluation of the SSD images alone as well as by comparison with conventional arteriograms. The ideal threshold, as shown by comparison with conventional arteriography, was better correlated with a threshold value selected by qualitative evaluation of SSD images alone (rs = .42), than with measured enhancement in visceral organs (rs = -.289 to .009). The degree of stenosis was overestimated in a single renal artery (1 of 18) because of an inappropriate threshold selected by evaluation of the SSD images alone. In comparison with a segmentation threshold calculated from measured enhancement of visceral organs, a segmentation threshold selected by qualitative evaluation of the resulting SSD images is more likely to approximate the ideal threshold. Given the subjective nature of such threshold selection, further evaluation is warranted to determine whether threshold selection may result in inaccurate grading of stenosis.

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