Matthew Smith, Jared Grice, Jared O'Leary, Gary T Smith
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: We compared lung perfusion abnormalities using non-contrast X-ray pulsatility index (XPI) to pulmonary angiography in patients with suspected CTEPH.
Materials and methods: Volunteers suspected of CTEPH between April 2023 and May 2024 were enrolled and provided consent for the IRB-approved prospective study, resulting in 13 patients (6 male; 7 female) and 18 independent lungs. Fluoroscopic acquisition (70 kV, 30 frames/s) was acquired over an 8-second breath-hold. The temporal signal from each pixel was decomposed into individual frequency components using spectral analysis. Signal oscillating at the heart rate was isolated using a band-pass filter and the amplitude (XPI) mapped to form an image. Immediately after each fluoroscopic acquisition for XPI, digital subtraction pulmonary angiography was performed using catheter-injected contrast in the same projection for comparison. Both XPI and DSA perfusion maps were segmented using a semi-automated technique. Segmentation maps were compared using the Dice similarity score, a statistical measurement of overlap.
Results: Non-contrast fluoroscopy and contrast DSA images were obtained in 18 lungs. All patients were able to perform satisfactory breath-hold, despite several with moderate to severe CTEPH. Direct comparison of segmentation maps revealed an average Dice score of 0.70, suggesting excellent agreement between XPI and pulmonary angiography in depicting regions of blood flow and perfusion defects.
Conclusions: XPI is a non-contrast method to evaluate and monitor pulmonary perfusion, producing maps with excellent agreement to pulmonary angiography, which is confirmatory for CTEPH. This technique could improve clinical efficiency as a screening or diagnostic test to augment clinical pulmonary function assessment.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Thoracic Imaging (JTI) provides authoritative information on all aspects of the use of imaging techniques in the diagnosis of cardiac and pulmonary diseases. Original articles and analytical reviews published in this timely journal provide the very latest thinking of leading experts concerning the use of chest radiography, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography, ultrasound, and all other promising imaging techniques in cardiopulmonary radiology.
Official Journal of the Society of Thoracic Radiology:
Japanese Society of Thoracic Radiology
Korean Society of Thoracic Radiology
European Society of Thoracic Imaging.