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Spiral versus electron-beam CT for coronary artery calcium scoring

Authors :
Lloyd E. Greaser
Aletha Emerick
Michael M. McNitt-Gray
James Sayre
S. Heinze
Matthew S. Brown
Jonathan G. Goldin
Denise R. Aberle
Hyo-Chun Yoon
Source :
Radiology. 221(1)
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

To determine differences in coronary artery calcium detection, quantification, and reproducibility, as measured at electron-beam computed tomography (CT) and subsecond spiral CT with retrospective electrocardiogram gating in an asymptomatic adult population.Seventy subjects asymptomatic for coronary heart disease underwent both electron-beam CT and subsecond spiral CT. In all subjects, two images each were obtained with both scanners. Two experienced readers using three different algorithms scored each of the four scans: one score for the electron-beam CT images and two scores for the spiral CT images.With a 130-HU threshold for the quantification of calcium, there were no significant differences in interscan and interobserver variation in calcium scores between the electron-beam CT and spiral CT images. There was greater interobserver (P.001) and interscan (P.03) variation in scores when a 90-HU threshold was used for spiral CT images. With a 130-HU threshold, when calcium scores were used for clinical risk stratification, there was a significant difference between the results obtained with electron-beam CT and those obtained with spiral CT (P.05).Spiral CT has not yet proved to be a feasible alternative to electron-beam CT for coronary artery calcium quantification. There are systematic differences between calcium scores obtained with single-detector array subsecond spiral CT and those obtained with electron-beam CT.

Details

ISSN :
00338419
Volume :
221
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....68eed2f0c139a1f2d2e5a81220ec8d84