| Literature DB >> 30386498 |
Caryl Elizabeth Richards1, Stephen Dorman2, Patricia John3, Anthony Davies3, Sharon Evans3, Tishi Ninan3, David Martin4, Sriranj Kannoly5, Gail Roberts-Davies4, Mark Ramsey2, Daniel Rhys Obaid1.
Abstract
AIM: To determine the radiation dose and image quality in coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) using state-of-the-art dose reduction methods in unselected "real world" patients.Entities:
Keywords: Coronary computed tomography angiography; Effective radiation dose; Image quality; Iterative reconstruction; Prospectively electrocardiogram gating; Tube current; Tube voltage
Year: 2018 PMID: 30386498 PMCID: PMC6205842 DOI: 10.4329/wjr.v10.i10.135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Radiol ISSN: 1949-8470
Patient characteristics
| Number of patients | 543 | |
| Age (yr) | 56 ± 11 | |
| Gender | Male/Female (33%/67%) | |
| Mean weight (kg) | 81 ± 18 | |
| Mean heart rate (bpm) | 70.3 ± 11.4 | |
| Oral Beta-blocker | 204 (38) | |
| IV Beta-blocker | 255 (47) | |
| Heart rate during scan (bpm) | < 60 bpm | 349 (64) |
| 60-65 bpm | 112 (21) | |
| 65-75 bpm | 55 (10) | |
| > 75 bpm | 18 (3) | |
| Not recorded | 11 (2) | |
Weight data only available for 32% of the patients.
Figure 1Distribution of effective doses for patients undergoing coronary computed tomography angiography.
Figure 2Coronary computed tomography angiography examination with image quality score 4 performed in a 52 years old female patient with heart rate of 56 bpm with a dose of 0.18 mSv.
Characteristics of patients with image quality scores of 1 + 2 vs 3 + 4
| Female patient | 12/30 (63%) | 216/391 (67%) | |
| Mean age ± SD (years) | 57.5 ± 10.5 | 55.5 ± 10.6 | |
| No. of patients with | 22 (69%) | 457 (91%) | |
| heart rate ≤ 65 bpm | |||
| No. of patients with | 10 (31%) | 43 (9%) | |
| heart rate > 65 bpm | |||
| Effective dose ± SD (mSv) | 1.98 ± 1.69 | 1.24 ± 1.41 |
Figure 3Examples of correlation of coronary computed tomography angiography with invasive angiography. A: Correct identification of ostial stenosis in right coronary; B: Correct identification of significant stenosis in left anterior descending coronary; C: Coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) incorrectly classifies lesion as not significant (subsequently proven to be haemodynamically significant with fractional flow reserve); D: CCTA incorrectly identifies a significant lesion in circumflex coronary due to artefact from extensive calcification.