J Comput Assist Tomogr Volume 33, Number 1, January/February 2009
Yusuke Tsuge, MD, Masayuki Kanematsu, MD, Satoshi Goshima, MD, Hiroshi Kondo, MD, Hiroaki Hoshi, MD,Ryujiro Yokoyama, MS, RT, Toshiharu Miyoshi, RT, Minoru Onozuka, PhD, Noriyuki Moriyama, MD, and Kyongtae T Bae, MD, PhD
Objective: The purpose of our study was to prospectively determine optimal scan delays for multiphasic imaging of the kidney performed with multidetector row computed tomography (CT) and fixed injection duration of intravenous contrast medium
Materials and Methods: One hundred ninety-eight patients underwent 3-phase CT of the kidney with 8-slice CT after receiving 2 mL/kg of an intravenous contrast medium of 300 mg I/mL for a fixed duration of 30 seconds. The patients were prospectively randomized into 4 groups according to different scan delays from the start of injection: group 1 (25, 45, 65 seconds), group 2 (30, 50, 70 seconds), group 3 (35, 55, 75 seconds), and group 4 (40, 60, 80 sec). Mean CT values (Hounsfield units [HU]) of the abdominal aorta, renal arteries, veins, cortexes, and medulla were measured. Increases in CT values from precontrast to post-contrast CT (8HU) and renal artery-to-vein and renal cortex-to-medulla differential contrasts (SHU) were assessed. Qualitative analysis was also performed.
Results: Abdominal aorta and renal artery enhancements peaked at 35 seconds (305 ΔHU; 253 ΔHU) after injection start, and renal veins peaked at 45 seconds (196 ΔHU). Renal cortexes peaked at 40 seconds (197 AHU), and renal medullae peaked at 75 seconds (152 ΔHU). Renal artery-to-vein differential contrasts were high (95-137 SHU) at 25 to 30 seconds, and cortex-to-medulla contrasts were high (79-130 SHU) at 30 to 55 seconds and then decreased to less than 10 SHU at 75 seconds. Qualitative results were in good agreement with quantitative results.
Conclusions: With a fixed 30-second injection, estimated optimal scan delays for multiphasic imaging the kidney were, from the start of injection, 25 to 30 seconds for renal arterial CT angiography, 35 to 45 seconds for the corticomedullary, and 75 seconds for the nephrographic phase.