Kalvach P, Jirout J
Neuroradiology. 1983;25(1):29-32. doi: 10.1007/BF00327476.
Pre- and postcontrast scans of the same normal brain tissue layer were compared in 20 patients in order to evaluate postcontrast density response. The original purpose of this investigation was to explain a paradoxical phenomenon of density decrease, which has been regularly observed in our patients. Control phantom measurements revealed that the decrease of density values is a function of the time interval between the analysed and the previous scan. Prolonged interscan interval--due to contrast injection--enables a change in the sensitivity of CT detectors to be registered. It is probable that any study of cerebral blood volume could be unfavourably influenced by this phenomenon. Comparison between the postcontrast brain scan density decrease and density decrease of a phantom showed substantially no difference, so that we estimate the contrast response of the brain parenchyma in toto as insignificant. Further, a comparative analysis between contrast response of the white and gray matter has been made. The gray-white matter difference increased from precontrast 4.56 H to postcontrast 7.82 H. The relatively high difference of 3.26 H between the white and gray matter enhancement compared with negligible enhancement of the brain slice as a whole leads us to the hypothesis, that an absolute decrease of white matter density, as a biological reaction to the injected contrast solution, has to be presumed.