PURPOSE: To assess the effect of the injection rate of contrast medium on pancreatic and hepatic enhancement at abdominal helical computed tomography (CT). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty-four contrast medium-enhanced abdominal helical CT scans (64 adult patients) were obtained with 150 mL of contrast medium. The injection rate was 2.5 mL/sec for the first 32 scans and 5.0 mL/sec for the remaining 32. Scans were obtained at 5-sec intervals, with an intermediate 8-sec breathing interval. Hepatic and pancreatic enhancement levels were measured and averaged, and time-attenuation curves were plotted for both groups. Differences in weight, age, time to peak pancreatic and hepatic enhancement, and peak enhancement were assessed with the Student t test. RESULTS: Both peak enhancement and time to peak enhancement were significantly different between the two injection rates (P < or = .002), with faster, more intense hepatic and pancreatic enhancement at the higher rate. At 2.5 mL/sec, the pancreas reached a peak attenuation level of 65 HU at 69 sec, and the liver reached a peak of 58 HU at 87 sec. At 5.0 mL/sec, the pancreas reached a peak attenuation of 84 HU at 43 sec, and the liver reached a peak of 75 HU at 63 sec.
PURPOSE: To assess the effect of the injection rate of contrast medium on pancreatic and hepatic enhancement at abdominal helical computed tomography (CT). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty-four contrast medium-enhanced abdominal helical CT scans (64 adult patients) were obtained with 150 mL of contrast medium. The injection rate was 2.5 mL/sec for the first 32 scans and 5.0 mL/sec for the remaining 32. Scans were obtained at 5-sec intervals, with an intermediate 8-sec breathing interval. Hepatic and pancreatic enhancement levels were measured and averaged, and time-attenuation curves were plotted for both groups. Differences in weight, age, time to peak pancreatic and hepatic enhancement, and peak enhancement were assessed with the Student t test. RESULTS: Both peak enhancement and time to peak enhancement were significantly different between the two injection rates (P < or = .002), with faster, more intense hepatic and pancreatic enhancement at the higher rate. At 2.5 mL/sec, the pancreas reached a peak attenuation level of 65 HU at 69 sec, and the liver reached a peak of 58 HU at 87 sec. At 5.0 mL/sec, the pancreas reached a peak attenuation of 84 HU at 43 sec, and the liver reached a peak of 75 HU at 63 sec.
Authors: L Camera; S Paoletta; C Mollica; F Milone; V Napolitano; L De Luca; A Faggiano; A Colao; M Salvatore Journal: Radiol Med Date: 2011-02-01 Impact factor: 3.469
Authors: Er-Wei Bai; James R Bennett; Robert McCabe; Melhem J Sharafuddin; Henri Bai; John Halloran; Michael Vannier; Ying Liu; Chenglin Wang; Ge Wang Journal: J Xray Sci Technol Date: 2006 Impact factor: 1.535