| Literature DB >> 27554662 |
Marcin Fraczek1, Maciej Guzinski2, Monika Morawska-Kochman3, Tomasz Krecicki3.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to compare visualisation of the surgically relevant anatomical structures via low- and standard-dose multidetector CT protocol in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) and higher risk for perioperative complications (i.e. presence of bronchial asthma, history of sinus surgery and advanced nasal polyposis). 135 adult CRS patients were divided randomly into standard-dose (120 kVp, 100 mAs) or low-dose CT groups (120 kVp, 45 mAs). The detectability of the vital anatomical structures (anterior ethmoid artery, optic nerve, cribriform plate and lamina papyracea) was scored using a five-point scale (from excellent to unacceptable) by a radiologist and sinus surgeon. Polyp sizes were quantified endoscopically according to the Lildholdt's scale (LS). Olfactory function was tested with the "Sniffin' Sticks" test. On the low-dose CT images, detectability ranged from 2.42 (better than poor) for cribriform plate among anosmic cases to 4.11 (better than good) for lamina papyracea in cases without nasal polyps. Identification of lamina papyracea on low-dose scans was significantly worse in each group and the same was the case with cribriform plates in patients with advanced polyposis and anosmia. Cribriform plates were the most poorly identified (between poor and average) among all the structures on low-dose images. Identification of anterior ethmoid artery (AEA) with reduced dose was insignificantly worse than with standard-dose examination. The AEA was scored as an average-defined structure and was the second weakest visualised. In conclusion, preoperatively, low-dose protocols may not sufficiently visualise the surgically relevant anatomical structures in patients with CRS and bronchial asthma, advanced nasal polyps (LS > 2) and history of sinus surgery. Low mAs value enables comparable detectability of sinonasal landmarks with standard-dose protocols in patients without analysed risk factors. In the context of planned surgery, the current preferences of the tube should be carefully evaluated for different patient constitutions to minimise the risk of complications.Entities:
Keywords: Anatomy; Complications; Computed tomography; Endoscopic sinus surgery; Low dose; Nasal polyps; Radiation; Rhinosinusitis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27554662 PMCID: PMC5281658 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-016-4268-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Comparison between chronic rhinosinusitis patients diagnosed with low- or standard-dose multidetector CT protocols
| Patient characteristics | Low-dose protocol ( | Standard-dose protocol ( |
|---|---|---|
| Female/male, | 44/39 | 29/23 |
| Mean age (years) | 50.4 | 49.3 |
| DLP (mGycm), mean (S.D.) | 34.12 (6.53) | 341.36 (58.62)* |
| Lund–MacKay CT score, mean (S.D.) | 10.28 (6.75) | 11.4 (6.02) |
| Lildholdt’s scale, mean (S.D.) | 1.56 (1.77) | 2.08 (1.72) |
| 0 acc. Lildholdt’s scale, | 38 (46) | 16 (31) |
| 1–2 acc. Lildholdt’s scale, | 17 (20) | 18 (34.5) |
| >2 acc. Lildholdt’s scale, | 28 (34) | 18 (34.5) |
| Bronchial asthma, | 16 (19) | 11 (21) |
| History of sinus surgery, | 18 (22) | 22 (42) |
| Anosmic, | 22 (26) | 16 (30) |
* p < 0.001
Fig. 1The accuracy of sinus anatomy visualisation (mean ± S.D.) in patients with brachial asthma (a), enhanced nasal polyposis (>2 acc. Lildholdt’s scale) (b), history of sinus surgery and anosmia (d) via low-dose (LD) and standard-dose (SD) multidetector CT protocols. Image quality ranged from 1 (unacceptable) to 5 (excellent). Dashed line indicates threshold of acceptability. Statistical image quality deterioration compared to the standard-dose examination
Fig. 2Coronal images of multidetector CT scans obtained according to low-dose (120 kVp, 45 mAs) protocol in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis. Significant image quality deterioration (a) seen i.a. in olfactory fossa (arrow) in anosmic subject with massive nasal polyposis (>2 acc. Lildholdt’s scale). Well-defined bony margins (b) in normosmic patient without polyps in nasal endoscopy