1. Hepatic Height on Coronal Computed Tomography Images Predicts Total Liver Volume in European Adults Without Liver Disease.
- Author
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Soyer, Philippe, Sirol, Marc, Dohan, Anthony, Gayat, Etienne, Placé, Vinciane, Hristova, Lora, Hamzi, Lounis, and Boudiaf, Mourad
- Subjects
LIVER diseases ,TOMOGRAPHY ,IMAGE processing ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,MEDICAL statistics ,REGRESSION analysis ,EUROPEANS ,DISEASES - Abstract
Background: Hepatic volume measurement provides useful information in a large range of clinical situations. Aims: The goal of this study was to test the hypothesis that significant correlation exists between hepatic volume calculated using three-dimensional reconstruction of computed tomography (CT) data and hepatic height calculated using coronal reformation of CT images in European adult patients without liver disease. Methods: One hundred patients (50 men, 50 women; mean age, 47 years) without hepatic disease were included. Coronal and three-dimensional images of the liver were obtained using 64-section helical CT. Correlation between hepatic height and hepatic volume was searched for using the Pearson correlation test. Regression analysis was used to compare hepatic height and hepatic volume. Results: A strong and highly significant positive correlation was found between hepatic height and hepatic volume, with a correlation coefficient ( r) of 0.767 (95%CI 0.672-0.837; r = 0.588) ( P < 0.001). The equation of the correlation line was y = 11.764 x − 244 where y represents the hepatic volume in cm and x the hepatic height in mm. Conclusion: Hepatic height as obtained on coronal CT image is a simple and rapid measurement that allows predicting hepatic volume in European adult patients without liver disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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