1.Applications of retrospective electrocardiogram editing in dual-source computed tomography coronary angiography in patients with arrhythmia.
Yan-fu SHEN ; Lei YIN ; Xiao-mei ZHENG ; Ming-beng MA ; Xiao-lan WU ; Jia-wei SU ; Tian-hui ZHENG ; Lie-xin LIN ; Rui-bin DU
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2010;32(6):671-676
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the clinical value of retrospective electrocardiogram (ECG) -editing technique in dual-source computed tomography (CT) coronary angiography in patients with arrhythmia.
METHODSTotally 73 patients with arrhythmia during dual-source CT coronary angiography were included into this study. A retrospective gating technique and ECG-editing technique (Insert Sync; Disable Sync; Delete Sync; Shift R-peak) were used in patients who needed ECG-editing. Two experienced radiologists evaluated in consensus all pre-editing and post-editing reconstructed images and recorded scores according to the American Heart Association guidelines on coronary segmentation on a per segment basis. Image quality of all coronary segments was assessed using a four-point grading scale from excellent (4 scores) to non-assessable (1 score) .
RESULTSThe overall mean image quality of 34 patients who did not need ECG-editing was 3.42 ± 0.20. In 39 patients who needed ECG-editing, the overall mean image quality before and after ECG-editing was 2.39?0.37 and 3.22?0.24. The mean image quality in every segment between pre-editing and post-editing was also significantly different (P<0.01) .
CONCLUSIONECG-editing technique can remarkably improve image quality of coronary artery segments by reducing or even eliminating the artifact produced by arrhythmia during dual-source CT coronary angiography.
Adult ; Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Arrhythmias, Cardiac ; diagnostic imaging ; Coronary Angiography ; methods ; Electrocardiography ; Female ; Humans ; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ; methods ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Tomography, X-Ray Computed ; methods