• CT Angiographic Measurement of Vascular Blood Flow Velocity by Using Projection Data

    Radiology: Volume 261: Number 3-December 2011

    Sven Prevrhal, Ph2 Carlos H. Forsythe, BA Roy J. Harnish, MSc Maythem Saeed, MD Benjamin M.Yeh, MD

    Purpose: To determine whether flow Velocity can be measured by using projection data from computed tomographic (CT) scans obtained during contrast material injection in a phantom model.

    Materials and Methods: The authors constructed a 12.7-mm-diameter single-channel flow phantom with constant water flow velocity settings of 25.3, 43.9, and 70.5 cm/sec. For each flow velocity, serial axial scans were obtained with 16-section multidetector CT while a 10-mL bolus of contrast material was injected upstream of the imaging plane. For each bo­lus injection, the CT projection data from the scan with the sharpest increase in magnitude of detected contrast material was used for flow velocity measurements. Flow velocity was calculated as the ratio of distance between CT detector rows and the corresponding time lag in the contrast enhancement curves and was correlated with the reference velocities. Five separate contrast material in­jections and CT measurements were made for each flow velocity setting.

    Results: The correlation coefficient between the CT measurements of flow velocity and the reference measurements was 0.98 (P < .05). The mean CT measurements of flow velocity were 34.2, 53.9, and 80.8 cm/sec for slow, moderate, and fast velocity settings, respectively, overestimating the cor­responding actual flow velocities by 26%, 18%, and 13% and showing precision values (coefficients of variation) of 5.2%, 3.7%, and 6.6%.

    Conclusions: Flow velocity can be measured from row-to-row multide­tector CT projectional data obtained during a single gan­try revolution as a bolus of contrast material flows through a vascular phantom. With further development, this novel technique could potentially provide physiologic informa­tion to complement the anatomic CT angiographic find­ings of vascular disease.