Coronary CT Angiography Using Low Iodine Delivery Rate and Tube Voltage Determined by Body Mass Index: Superiority in Clinical Practice

SummaryTo explore the feasibility and superiority of iodine delivery rate (IDR) and tube voltage determined by patients ’ body mass index (BMI) in coronary CT angiography (CCTA), a total of 1567 patients undertaking CCTA during Feb. and Dec. 2016 were enrolled and divided into two groups. In the control group, the IDR and tube voltage were fixed, while in the experimental group, the IDR and tube voltage were determ ined by patients’ BMI. The volume of iodinated contrast media (ICM), extravasation rate, extravasation volume, extravasation recovery interval, incidence rate of adverse reactions, effective dose (ED) and image quality of the two groups were compared. The experiments demonstrated that the ICM volu me, extravasation rate, extravasation volume, extravasation recovery interval, incidence of adverse reactions and ED were lower or shorter in the experimental group than in the control group, and the differences were statistically significant (allP<0.05). However, there were no significant differences in the mean CT value, image noise, signal to noise ratio and contrast to noise ratio between the two groups (allP<0.05), which were consistent with the diagnosticians ’ subjective evaluation outcomes. Our findings suggested that in CCTA, it is feasible to determine the IDR and tube voltage based on patients’ BMI; low tube voltage and IDR are superior to the fixed tube voltage and IDR and are worthy of clinical promotion.
Source: Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology -- Medical Sciences -- - Category: Research Source Type: research