Nance John William, Bastarrika Gorka, Kang Doo Kyoung, Ruzsics Balazs, Vogt Sebastian, Schmidt Bernhard, Raupach Rainer, Flohr Thomas G, Schoepf U Joseph
Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29401, USA.
J Comput Assist Tomogr. 2011 Jan-Feb;35(1):119-25. doi: 10.1097/RCT.0b013e3181f87475.
Dual-energy computed tomography (DECT) has been proposed for the comprehensive assessment of coronary artery stenosis and myocardial perfusion yet traditionally required reducing the temporal resolution of cardiac studies. We evaluated a reconstruction algorithm that preserves high temporal resolution at cardiac DECT.
Twelve consecutive patients (3 women; mean [SD] age, 64 [10] years) with an abnormal single photon emission CT result underwent invasive coronary angiography and cardiac DECT. Dual-energy CT studies were reconstructed using the standard algorithm with 165-millisecond temporal resolution and a hybrid algorithm providing 83-millisecond temporal resolution. These studies were rated for coronary image quality and motion artifacts and compared with invasive coronary angiographic studies.
One hundred sixty-eight coronary artery segments (82%) were evaluated. The standard 165-millisecond reconstruction provided 95% diagnostic segments compared with 100% using the 83-millisecond hybrid reconstruction. Image quality was rated significantly (P < 0.05) better with hybrid reconstruction and had 91.4% sensitivity, 94.7% specificity, 82.1% positive predictive value, and 97.7% negative predictive value for detecting significant stenosis versus 85.7%, 93.2%, 76.9%, and 96.1% with standard reconstruction, respectively.
Hybrid image reconstruction mitigates the former limitations in temporal resolution of cardiac DECT.