High-pitch coronary CT angiography in dual-source CT during free breathing vs. breath holding in patients with low heart rates |
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Authors: | Bernhard Bischoff Felix G. Meinel Alessandra Del Prete Maximilian F. Reiser Hans-Christoph Becker |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute for Clinical Radiology; Ludwig-Maximilians-University Hospital Munich, Germany;2. DZHK (German Centre for Cardiovascular Research), Partner Site Munich Heart Alliance, Munich, Germany;3. Department of Radiology Magrassi-Lanzara, Second University of Naples, Naples, Italy |
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Abstract: | BackgroundCoronary CT angiography (CCTA) is usually performed during breath holding to reduce motion artifacts caused by respiration. However, some patients are not able to follow the breathing commands adequately due to deafness, hearing impairment, agitation or pulmonary diseases. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential of high-pitch CCTA in free breathing patients when compared to breath holding patients.MethodsIn this study we evaluated 40 patients (20 free breathing and 20 breath holding patients) with a heart rate of 60 bpm or below referred for CCTA who were examined on a 2nd generation dual-source CT system. Image quality of each coronary artery segment was rated using a 4-point grading scale (1: non diagnostic–4: excellent).ResultsMean heart rate during image acquisition was 52 ±5 bpm in both groups. There was no significant difference in mean image quality, slightly favoring image acquisition during breath holding (mean image quality score 3.76 ± 0.32 in breath holding patients vs. 3.61 ± 0.45 in free breathing patients; p = 0.411). Due to a smaller amount of injected contrast medium, there was a trend for signal intensity to be slightly lower in free breathing patients, but this was not statistically significant (435 ± 123 HU vs. 473 ± 117 HU; p = 0.648).ConclusionIn patients with a low heart rate who are not able to hold their breath adequately, CCTA can also be acquired during free breathing without substantial loss of image quality when using a high pitch scan mode in 2nd generation dual-source CT. |
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Keywords: | CCTA Dual-source CT High-pitch mode Free breathing Breath holding |
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