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Value of contrast-enhanced arterial phase imaging in addition to portovenous phase in CT evaluation of blunt abdominopelvic trauma.

Authors :
Kawinwongkowit, Kawin
Kaewlai, Rathachai
Kasemassawachanont, Adisak
Chatpuwaphat, Jitti
Kumthong, Nutnaree
Somcharit, Lertpong
Source :
European Radiology. Mar2023, Vol. 33 Issue 3, p1641-1652. 12p. 3 Black and White Photographs, 2 Diagrams, 5 Charts.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objectives: Compare the diagnostic performance of the arterial phase plus portovenous phases (AP + PVP) of abdominopelvic CT (CT) with PVP alone in the detection and characterization of traumatic vascular injury and the effects on radiologists' confidence. Methods: CT of 103 consecutive inpatients (median 36 years, 83 males) with blunt abdominopelvic injuries were retrospectively included if performed within 24 h after trauma and before definitive management. Images were re-reviewed by two blinded radiologists with disagreements resolved by the third radiologist. Results: Sixty vascular injuries (liver 23, spleen 15, kidneys 9, pancreas 2, adrenals 3, mesentery, and pelvis 4 each) were found with 4 injuries (liver 2, spleen, and kidneys 1 each) not detected at initial CT. Nineteen (liver 6, spleen 10, kidneys 2, adrenal 1) were visualized only on AP. The sensitivity and accuracy of AP + PVP were 89.58–91.67% and 94.44–95.15%, compared to 61.67–62.50% and 77.67–80.00% of PVP alone. The agreements on the types of injury with final diagnoses were higher for AP + PVP than for PVP alone (78.69% vs. 44.26%). The mean diagnostic radiologist confidence ((1 = 25%, 2 = 50%, 3 = 75%, 4 > 90%) increased significantly in the detection (from 3.38 to 3.71) and characterization (from 2.46 to 3.67) of vascular injuries with AP + PVP compared to PVP alone. For 19 lesions detected only on AP, 11 (spleen 8, liver 2, adrenal 1) received nonoperative management; others had transarterial embolization or surgery. Conclusions: The addition of AP improves the detection and characterization of vascular injuries in CT evaluation of blunt abdominopelvic trauma. Key Points: • AP+PVP was more sensitive and precise than PVP alone in the detection of traumatic vascular abdominopelvic injuries. • AP+PVP improved the characterization of traumatic abdominopelvic vascular injuries. • When all abdominopelvic vascular injuries were considered, AP increased radiologists' diagnostic confidence in the detection and characterization of vascular injuries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09387994
Volume :
33
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161963620
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-022-09208-1