| Literature DB >> 34902060 |
Nigar Salimova1, Jan B Hinrichs1, Marcel Gutberlet1, Bernhard C Meyer1, Frank K Wacker1, Christian von Falck2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of the reconstructed field-of-view (FOV) on image quality in computed-tomography angiography (CTA) of the lower extremities.Entities:
Keywords: Computed tomography angiography; Lower extremity; Peripheral arterial disease
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34902060 PMCID: PMC9038851 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-021-08391-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 7.034
Scan and reconstruction parameters for the CT angiography of the lower extremities
| Scan parameters | |
|---|---|
| Collimation | 2 × 192 × 0.6 mm (2 × 96 detector rows with a diagonal flying focal spot) |
| Rotation time | 0.25 s |
| Pitch factor | 0.35 |
| Reconstructed slice thickness | 0.6 mm |
| Reconstruction increment | 0.4 mm |
| Contrast volume | 100 ml (400 mg/ml) |
| Saline chaser | 50 ml |
| Flow | 4.5 ml/s |
Fig. 1The objective image quality metric. First, the bone (red) and soft tissues (blue) are automatically segmented for the standard FOV (a) and the small FOV (b). Afterward, the significant edges are automatically identified (c, d) and the 2D image gradient is calculated on a slice-by-slice basis. An exemplary line profile (e) and image gradient profile (f) for the small (black line) and standard (red line) FOV is calculated across a major vessel (red line in a–d), demonstrating the improvement of image sharpness for the small FOV reconstruction
Mean scores (± standard deviation) and median scores (with interquartile range) of the subjective image analysis. For each vessel segment the differences between the large and the small FOV were statistically significant (*Student’s t-test, #Wilcoxon signed-rank test, p < 0.05)
| Vessel segment | FOV size | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Large | Small | Δ Mean | |||
| Mean ± SD | Median | Mean ± SD | Median | ||
| Femoral | 4.02* ± 0.65 | 4 [4-4]# | 4.70* ± 0.48 | 5 [4, 5]# | 0.68 |
| Popliteal | 3.82* ± 0.63 | 4 [3, 4]# | 4.65* ± 0.52 | 5 [4, 5]# | 0.83 |
| Crural | 3.06* ± 0.72 | 3 [3-3]# | 4.18* ± 0.72 | 4 [4-4]# | 1.12 |
| Pedal | 2.79* ± 0.73 | 3 [2, 3]# | 3.87* ± 0.82 | 4 [3, 4]# | 1.08 |
Fig. 2Box-plots of the image quality ratings for the small FOV versus the large FOV datasets at the different vessel segments. The ratings are averaged over the three readers. Random jitter was added to the datapoints to illustrate the frequency of the different reader scores. The improvement of the image quality using the small FOV reconstruction is clearly demonstrated. All results were statistically significant (p < 0.05)
Fig. 3Illustration of the improvement of image quality for the small FOV reconstruction (right column) as compared to the standard reconstruction (left column). Already at the femoral level (a, b) a sharper image quality and better delineation of the vessel wall is noted. The effect is much more pronounced at the calf level (c, d) in the same patient with heavily calcified arteries. In another patient with severe vessel calcifications of the popliteal artery (e, f), the reconstruction with a smaller FOV results in a better delineation of the contrasted vessel lumen against the coarse calcification