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COMPARATIVE STUDY
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diagnosis of disease of the common carotid artery bifurcation: CT angiography vs catheter angiography.
AJR. American Journal of Roentgenology 1993 August
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this prospective study was to compare CT angiography with conventional catheter angiography for imaging the bifurcation of the common carotid artery in patients with signs and symptoms of atherosclerotic disease.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Ten symptomatic patients (20 bifurcations of the common carotid artery) underwent contrast-enhanced spiral CT of the neck. The images were preprocessed and postprocessed by using a commercially available volume-rendering technique and a maximum-intensity-projection algorithm. All patients subsequently underwent conventional catheter angiography.
RESULTS: CT angiographic findings matched those on conventional angiograms in only 50% of cases. Two nearly occluded internal carotid arteries were missed with CT angiography. Four internal carotid arteries were interpreted as occluded on the basis of CT angiograms but were shown as patent on catheter angiograms. Of five severe stenoses shown by CT angiography, only two were confirmed by conventional angiography.
CONCLUSION: The results indicate that CT angiography as used in this study cannot replace catheter angiography. With CT angiography, both overestimation and underestimation of stenoses occur.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Ten symptomatic patients (20 bifurcations of the common carotid artery) underwent contrast-enhanced spiral CT of the neck. The images were preprocessed and postprocessed by using a commercially available volume-rendering technique and a maximum-intensity-projection algorithm. All patients subsequently underwent conventional catheter angiography.
RESULTS: CT angiographic findings matched those on conventional angiograms in only 50% of cases. Two nearly occluded internal carotid arteries were missed with CT angiography. Four internal carotid arteries were interpreted as occluded on the basis of CT angiograms but were shown as patent on catheter angiograms. Of five severe stenoses shown by CT angiography, only two were confirmed by conventional angiography.
CONCLUSION: The results indicate that CT angiography as used in this study cannot replace catheter angiography. With CT angiography, both overestimation and underestimation of stenoses occur.
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