| Literature DB >> 21586101 |
Antoine Schneider1, Lynne Johnson, Mark Goodwin, Anthony Schelleman, Rinaldo Bellomo.
Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common in critically ill patients and associated with important morbidity and mortality. Although alterations in renal perfusion are thought to play a causative role in the pathogenesis of AKI, there is, to date, no reliable technique that allows the assessment of renal perfusion that is applicable in the ICU. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) is an ultrasound imaging technique that makes use of microbubble-based contrast agents. These microbubbles, when injected into the bloodstream, allow visualization of vascular structures and, with contrast-specific imaging modes, detection of blood flow at the capillary level. Some recent CEUS-derived approaches allow quantification of blood flow in several organs, including the kidney. Current generation ultrasound contrast agents have strong stability and safety profiles. Along with post-marketing surveillance, numerous studies report safe administration of these agents, including in critically ill patients. This review presents information on the physical principles underlying CEUS, the methods allowing blood flow quantification and the potential applications of CEUS in critical care nephrology, currently as a research tool but perhaps in the future as a way of monitoring renal perfusion.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21586101 PMCID: PMC3218962 DOI: 10.1186/cc10058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Schematic illustration of a microbubble contrast agent: Sonovue (courtesy of Bracco SpA).
Figure 2Optical microscopic view of microbubbles in rabbit blood (courtesy of Bracco SpA).
Commercially available ultrasound contrast agents
| Contrast agent | Shell | Gas | Registered in |
|---|---|---|---|
| Optison | Human albumin | Perfluoropropane | USA, Canada |
| Definity (Luminity) | Phospholipids | Perfluoropropane | USA, Europe, Canada |
| Sonovue | Phospholipids | Sulfur hexafluoride | Canada, Europe, China, India, Korea |
| Sonazoid | Phospholipids | Perfluorobutane | Japan |
Figure 3Renal perfusion index measurement using dedicated quantification software. A screenshot of Sonotumor™, shown as an example of software allowing perfusion quantification in contrast-enhanced ultrasonography sequences. The upper segments show the contrast-enhanced images (left) as well as the conventional ultrasound images (right). This is where the reader can draw areas of interest (AOI) that will be analyzed by the software. A replenishment curve (lower segment) is then generated for each AOI. These curves represent the intensity of the echo-power as a function of time after the flash. Bold lines are fitted curves of the actual measured data represented by the clear lines. The fitted curves allow the derivation of a perfusion index (PI) for each AOI.
Figure 4Example of destruction refilling sequences obtained in a 60-year-old male patient 1 hour after coronary artery bypass surgery. Each panel of the figure is divided in two; the left side shows contrast specific images and the right side standard B-mode images. (a) After the destruction flash (left), no signal is detectable in the contrast-specific image (that is, all the microbubbles have been destroyed). (b) Five seconds after destruction (left), partial replenishment of the main arteries with contrast can be noticed. (c) Ten seconds post-destruction (left), the kidney is fully replenished with contrast. No significant changes are observed in B-mode images (a-c, right).
CEUS-derived parameters in a 60-year-old patient before and after coronary artery bypass graft surgery complicated by acute kidney injury stage I
| Pre-op | Post-op | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value | Average | Value | Average | Difference | ||
| Mean transit time (mTT; s) | AOI 1 | 1.51 | 1.91 | 2.06 | 2.09 | +9.5% |
| AOI 2 | 1.86 | 2.03 | ||||
| AOI 3 | 2.35 | 2.18 | ||||
| Relative blood volume (rBV; a.u.) | AOI 1 | 20,073 | 20,100 | 16,896 | 16,239 | -19.2% |
| AOI 2 | 19,309 | 16,574 | ||||
| AOI 3 | 20,920 | 15,248 | ||||
| Perfusion index (= rBV/mTT; a.u.) | AOI 1 | 13,293 | 10,523 | 8,202 | 7,786 | -26.0% |
| AOI 2 | 10,381 | 8,164 | ||||
| AOI 3 | 8,902 | 6,994 | ||||
The mean transit time (or the 'speed' of replenishment) increased by close to 10% after surgery compared to baseline. In the same time, the relative blood volume (rBV; or echo density) decreased by almost 20%. Altogether, the resulting perfusion index dropped by 26%. This indicates diminished renal perfusion. rBV is a measure of pixel luminance and is proportional to local contrast agent concentration. This value does not have a physical unit (a.u. = arbitrary units) and is thus not comparable from one ultrasound machine to another, but its modifications are proportional to changes in contrast agent concentration. The software applies a linearization of the video data to generate a number proportional to the concentration of contrast. This operation aims to reverse the log compression applied by all ultrasound machines and is based on the pixel luminance. The luminance observed in each pixel is transformed by a program that attributes a value between 0 and 255 to each pixel.
This value is then squared to reflect signal power. Possible values are between 0 and 255^2. These values do not have physical units but are proportional to the local concentration of contrast agent. In terms of absolute number, the values are not comparable between different systems (ultrasound machines) or different settings of a same system, but the kinetics of these values are respected. AOI, area of interest.