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Circulation. 1996;93:1919-1927

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(Circulation. 1996;93:1919-1927.)
© 1996 American Heart Association, Inc.


Articles

Quantification of Volumetric Coronary Blood Flow With Dual-Energy Digital Subtraction Angiography

Sabee Molloi, PhD; Atila Ersahin, PhD; Jerry Tang, PhD; James Hicks, PhD; Cyril Y. Leung, MD

From the Departments of Radiological Sciences (S.M., A.E., J.T.), Medicine (Cardiology) (S.M., C.Y.L.), and Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (J.H.), University of California (Irvine).

Background As a solution to the well-documented problems associated with visual interpretation of coronary arteriograms, more physiological methods of assessing coronary artery stenosis are being investigated. Volumetric coronary blood flow (BF) can be a valuable aid in the analysis of functional significance of arterial obstruction.

Methods and Results The left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) of 15 anesthetized pigs (40 to 50 kg) was dissected free from the epicardium in its proximal portion, and a transit-time ultrasound flow probe of the appropriate size was applied. A vascular occluder was positioned distal to the flow probe for flow adjustments. Contrast injections (2 to 4 mL/s for 3 seconds) were made into the left main coronary artery during image acquisition with a motion-immune dual-energy digital subtraction angiography (DE DSA) system. Tissue-suppressed energy-subtracted images were used to generate time-density curves. BF measurements were made in the LAD vascular bed with use of the time-density curve, with consideration that blood was momentarily replaced with contrast during the injection. In 19 comparisons, the mean BF, measured with the use of DE DSA, correlated extremely well with the mean ultrasound flow (DE DSA=0.90 ultrasound+3.10 mL/min, r=.96). Also, contrast injection increased the BF by an average of only 15% during the image-acquisition time interval.

Conclusions Accurate BF measurements can be made with motion-immune DE DSA. The BF measurements can be completed before the onset of significant changes in BF due to contrast injection. Furthermore, it is possible to make the BF measurements during routine coronary arteriography.


Key Words: blood flow • angiography • coronary disease • atherosclerosis • imaging




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