1.Three-dimensional CT angiography of the canine hepatic vasculature.
Yucheol JEONG ; Changyun LIM ; Sunkyoung OH ; Joohyun JUNG ; Jinhwa CHANG ; Junghee YOON ; Mincheol CHOI
Journal of Veterinary Science 2008;9(4):407-413
Eight Beagle dogs were anesthetized and were imaged using a single channel helical CT scanner. The contrast medium used in this study was iohexol (300 mg I/ml) and doses were 0.5 ml/kg for a cine scan, 3 ml/kg for an enhanced scan. The flow rate for contrast material administration was 2 ml/sec for all scans. This study was divided into three steps, with unenhanced, cine and enhanced scans. The enhanced scan was subdivided into the arterial phase and the venous phase. All of the enhanced scans were reconstructed in 1 mm intervals and the scans were interpreted by the use of reformatted images, a cross sectional histogram, maximum intensity projection and shaded surface display. For the cine scans, optimal times were a 9-sec delay time post IV injection in the arterial phase, and an 18-sec delay time post IV injection in the venous phase. A nine-sec delay time was acceptable for the imaging of the canine hepatic arteries by CT angiography. After completion of arterial phase scanning, venous structures of the liver were well visualized as seen on the venous phase.
Angiography/methods/*veterinary
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Animals
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Contrast Media/pharmacology
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Dogs/*anatomy & histology
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Iohexol/pharmacology
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Liver/*blood supply
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods/*veterinary
2.Coronary angiography of in vitro porcine heart using MSCT.
Lei WAN ; Siy It TELET ; Hua WEI ; Chong-Liang YING ; Ya-hui WANG ; Kai-fei DENG ; Dong-Hua ZOU ; Zheng-done LI ; Guang-You ZHU
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2014;30(5):321-336
OBJECTIVE:
To establish standardized methods and parameters of the isolated heart coronary angiography through the experiment of in vitro porcine heart by MSCT.
METHODS:
Based on different perfusion volume (50, 60 and 70 mL) and different perfusion-imaging time (5, 10 and 20 min), the in vitro porcine coronary artery was injected liposoluble and water-soluble contrast agents using remodel angiography equipment and scanned by MSCT. And the 3D image results were compared. The images were recorded and evaluated by 2 radiologists and analyzed by statistical software.
RESULTS:
Liposoluble contrast agent affected the images by damaging and infiltrating the fats around the coronary artery, while the water-soluble contrast agent didn't affect the images. The groups with 60 mL or 70 mL perfusion and 5 min perfusion-imaging time had the best images.
CONCLUSION
The suitable parameters of the angiography lay the foundation of postmortem coronary angiography.
Animals
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Coronary Angiography/veterinary*
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Coronary Vessels/diagnostic imaging*
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Heart
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Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods*
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In Vitro Techniques
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Multidetector Computed Tomography/veterinary*
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Predictive Value of Tests
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Software
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Software Validation
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Swine