1.Risk factors for arrhythmia after robotic cardiac surgery: A retrospective cohort study
Wenjun WU ; Renzhong DING ; Jianming CHEN ; Ye YUAN ; Yi SONG ; Manrong YAN ; Yijie HU
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2024;31(05):745-750
Objective To investigate the risk factors for arrhythmia after robotic cardiac surgery. Methods The data of the patients who underwent robotic cardiac surgery under cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) from July 2016 to June 2022 in Daping Hospital of Army Medical University were retrospectively analyzed. According to whether arrhythmia occurred after operation, the patients were divided into an arrhythmia group and a non-arrhythmia group. Univariate analysis and multivariate logistic analysis were used to screen the risk factors for arrhythmia after robotic cardiac surgery. Results A total of 146 patients were enrolled, including 55 males and 91 females, with an average age of 43.03±13.11 years. There were 23 patients in the arrhythmia group and 123 patients in the non-arrhythmia group. One (0.49%) patient died in the hospital. Univariate analysis suggested that age, body weight, body mass index (BMI), diabetes, New York Heart Association (NYHA) classification, left atrial anteroposterior diameter, left ventricular anteroposterior diameter, right ventricular anteroposterior diameter, total bilirubin, direct bilirubin, uric acid, red blood cell width, operation time, CPB time, aortic cross-clamping time, and operation type were associated with postoperative arrhythmia (P<0.05). Multivariate binary logistic regression analysis suggested that direct bilirubin (OR=1.334, 95%CI 1.003-1.774, P=0.048) and aortic cross-clamping time (OR=1.018, 95%CI 1.005-1.031, P=0.008) were independent risk factors for arrhythmia after robotic cardiac surgery. In the arrhythmia group, postoperative tracheal intubation time (P<0.001), intensive care unit stay (P<0.001) and postoperative hospital stay (P<0.001) were significantly prolonged, and postoperative high-dose blood transfusion events were significantly increased (P=0.002). Conclusion Preoperative direct bilirubin level and aortic cross-clamping time are independent risk factors for arrhythmia after robotic cardiac surgery. Postoperative tracheal intubation time, intensive care unit stay, and postoperative hospital stay are significantly prolonged in patients with postoperative arrhythmia, and postoperative high-dose blood transfusion events are significantly increased.
2.Application of tissue flap technique in breast conserving surgery for breast cancer
Mingjie YUAN ; Ying YIN ; Jianming YAN
Chinese Journal of Plastic Surgery 2024;40(6):702-708
Breast cancer surgery has been changing from radical mastectomy to modified radical mastectomy and breast-conserving surgery with less trauma and fewer complications. Breast conserving surgery has evolved into oncoplastic breast conserving surgery, which combines both breast conserving and plastic surgery. The application of autologous tissue flap is a research hotspot in oncoplastic breast conserving surgery. This article reviews the indications and contraindications of tissue flap technology in breast cancer, surgical methods and categories, application occasions of different types of tissue flaps, early and delayed postoperative complications, and the impact of different postoperative adjuvant treatments on tissue flaps, based on the latest research on oncoplastic breast conserving surgery both domestically and internationally.
3.Effects of high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet combined with radiotherapy on tumor microenvironment of Lewis lung cancer bearing mice
Ling XIAO ; Jiahua LYU ; Meihua CHEN ; Jianming HUANG ; Ming FAN ; Hongyuan JIA ; Yudi LIU ; Yuan WANG ; Tao LI
Chinese Journal of Oncology 2024;46(8):737-745
Objective:To investigate the effect of high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet combined with radiotherapy on the tumor microenvironment of mice with lung xenografts.Methods:C57BL/6J mice were selected to establish the Lewis lung cancer model, and they were divided into the normal diet group, the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group, the normal diet + radiotherapy group, and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group, with 18 mice in each group. The mice in the normal diet group and the normal diet + radiotherapy group were fed with the normal diet with 12.11% fat for energy supply, and the mice in the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group were fed with high-fat and low-carbohydratediet with 45.00% fat for energy. On the 12th to 14th days, the tumor sites of the mice in the normal diet + radiotherapy group and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group were treated with radiotherapy, and the irradiation dose was 24 Gy/3f. The body weight, tumor volume, blood glucose and blood ketone level, liver and kidney function, and survival status of the mice were observed and monitored. Immunohistochemical staining was used to detect the tumor-associated microangiogenesis molecule (CD34) and lymphatic endothelial hyaluronan receptor 1 (LYVE-1), Sirius staining was used to detect collagen fibers, and multiplex immunofluorescence was used to detect CD8 and programmed death-1 (PD-1). Expression of immune cell phenotypes (CD3, CD4, CD8, and Treg) was detected by flow cytometry.Results:On the 27th day after inoculation, the body weigh of the common diet group was(24.78±2.22)g, which was significantly higher than that of the common diet + radiotherapy group [(22.15±0.48)g, P=0.030] and high-fat low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group [(22.02±0.77)g, P=0.031)]. On the 15th day after inoculation, the tumor volume of the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group was (220.88±130.05) mm 3, which was significantly smaller than that of the normal diet group [(504.37±328.48) mm 3, P=0.042)] and the high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet group [(534.26±230.42) mm 3, P=0.016], but there was no statistically significant difference compared with the normal diet + radiotherapy group [(274.64±160.97) mm 3]. In the 4th week, the blood glucose values of the mice in the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group were lower than those in the normal diet group, with the value being (8.00±0.36) mmol/L and (9.57±0.40) mmol/L, respectively, and the difference was statistically significant ( P<0.05). The blood ketone values of the mice in the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group were higher than those in the normal diet group, with the value being (1.00±0.20) mmol/L and (0.63±0.06) mmol/L, respectively, in the second week. In the third week, the blood ketone values of the two groups of mice were (0.90±0.17) mmol/L and (0.70±0.10) mmol/L, respectively, and the difference was statistically significant ( P<0.05). On the 30th day after inoculation, there were no significant differences in aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, creatinine, and urea between the normal diet group and the high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet group (all P>0.05). The hearts, livers, spleens, lungs, and kidneys of the mice in each group had no obvious toxic changes and tumor metastasis. In the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group, the expression of CD8 was up-regulated in the tumor tissues of mice, and the expressions of PD-1, CD34, LYVE-1, and collagen fibers were down-regulated. The proportion of CD8 + T cells in the paratumoral lymph nodes of the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group was (25.13±0.97)%, higher than that of the normal diet group [(20.60±2.23)%, P<0.050] and the normal diet + radiotherapy group [(19.26±3.07)%, P<0.05], but there was no statistically significant difference with the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group [(22.03±1.75)%, P>0.05]. The proportion, of CD4 + T cells in the lymph nodes adjacent to the tumor in the normal diet + radiotherapy group (31.33±5.16)% and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group (30.63±1.70)% were higher than that in the normal diet group [(20.27±2.15)%, P<0.05] and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group (23.70±2.62, P<0.05). Treg cells accounted for the highest (16.58±5.10)% of T cells in the para-tumor lymph nodes of the normal diet + radiotherapy group, but compared with the normal diet group, the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group, and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group, there was no statistically significant difference (all P>0.05). Conclusion:High-fat and low-carbohydrate diet plus radiotherapy can enhance the recruitment and function of immune effector cells in the tumor microenvironment, inhibit tumor microangiogenesis, and thus inhibit tumor growth.
4.Construction of a variety of fusion gene probes for soft tissue sarcoma based on TaqMan technique and their clinical diagnostic applications
Shunping CHEN ; Yuan WU ; Shaojun HONG ; Qiang LI ; Jianming WENG ; Zongkai ZOU ; Mingzhi CAI
Chinese Journal of Clinical and Experimental Pathology 2024;40(10):1045-1051
Purpose To design PCR combined probes u-sing TaqMan technology to detect the expression of major driver genes in a variety of soft tissue sarcomas at one time,and to dis-cuss whether the combined probes can better assist clinicopatho-logical diagnosis based on histological features and FISH results.Methods Our research group designed 32 pairs of fusion gene probes related to soft tissue sarcoma based on TaqMan tech-nique,involving 10 types of sarcoma.The histopathological specimens of 70 patients with common fusion gene soft tissue sarcoma in our hospital were examined by fusion gene combina-tion,and the histopathological specimens of 30 patients with oth-er soft tissue sarcoma without fusion gene were set as controls.Individual common sarcoma types were analyzed with FISH probe detection.At the same time,the detection performance of the combined probe was evaluated by various methods.Results The soft tissue sarcoma-related fusion gene probe designed by our research group was used to detect the confirmed soft tissue sarcomas,and the results showed that the highest sensitivity was 100%.Among the three types of tumors,protuberant dermatofi-brosarcoma,synovial sarcoma and mucinous liposarcoma were verified by FISH,and the coincidence rate of the two methods was high,with no statistical significance(P>0.05).The re-sults of interlot and intralot reproducibility of protuberous derma-tofibrosarcoma,mucinous liposarcoma and synovial sarcoma were consistent.Three different concentration limits were used to de-tect the positive plasmid of all the fused gene RNA,and 25 cop-ies/μL was the lowest concentration limit.Conclusion Com-bined with the pathological diagnosis results,TaqMan technology can be used to design PCR combined probes for soft tissue sarco-ma,which have high sensitivity and high specificity and good methodological performance,and meet the needs of primary medical institutions for one-time and rapid auxiliary pathological diagnosis of common soft tissue sarcoma.It provides a rapid and reliable method for the detection of multiple fusion genes in clin-ical soft tissue sarcoma.
5.Effects of high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet combined with radiotherapy on tumor microenvironment of Lewis lung cancer bearing mice
Ling XIAO ; Jiahua LYU ; Meihua CHEN ; Jianming HUANG ; Ming FAN ; Hongyuan JIA ; Yudi LIU ; Yuan WANG ; Tao LI
Chinese Journal of Oncology 2024;46(8):737-745
Objective:To investigate the effect of high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet combined with radiotherapy on the tumor microenvironment of mice with lung xenografts.Methods:C57BL/6J mice were selected to establish the Lewis lung cancer model, and they were divided into the normal diet group, the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group, the normal diet + radiotherapy group, and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group, with 18 mice in each group. The mice in the normal diet group and the normal diet + radiotherapy group were fed with the normal diet with 12.11% fat for energy supply, and the mice in the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group were fed with high-fat and low-carbohydratediet with 45.00% fat for energy. On the 12th to 14th days, the tumor sites of the mice in the normal diet + radiotherapy group and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group were treated with radiotherapy, and the irradiation dose was 24 Gy/3f. The body weight, tumor volume, blood glucose and blood ketone level, liver and kidney function, and survival status of the mice were observed and monitored. Immunohistochemical staining was used to detect the tumor-associated microangiogenesis molecule (CD34) and lymphatic endothelial hyaluronan receptor 1 (LYVE-1), Sirius staining was used to detect collagen fibers, and multiplex immunofluorescence was used to detect CD8 and programmed death-1 (PD-1). Expression of immune cell phenotypes (CD3, CD4, CD8, and Treg) was detected by flow cytometry.Results:On the 27th day after inoculation, the body weigh of the common diet group was(24.78±2.22)g, which was significantly higher than that of the common diet + radiotherapy group [(22.15±0.48)g, P=0.030] and high-fat low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group [(22.02±0.77)g, P=0.031)]. On the 15th day after inoculation, the tumor volume of the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group was (220.88±130.05) mm 3, which was significantly smaller than that of the normal diet group [(504.37±328.48) mm 3, P=0.042)] and the high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet group [(534.26±230.42) mm 3, P=0.016], but there was no statistically significant difference compared with the normal diet + radiotherapy group [(274.64±160.97) mm 3]. In the 4th week, the blood glucose values of the mice in the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group were lower than those in the normal diet group, with the value being (8.00±0.36) mmol/L and (9.57±0.40) mmol/L, respectively, and the difference was statistically significant ( P<0.05). The blood ketone values of the mice in the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group were higher than those in the normal diet group, with the value being (1.00±0.20) mmol/L and (0.63±0.06) mmol/L, respectively, in the second week. In the third week, the blood ketone values of the two groups of mice were (0.90±0.17) mmol/L and (0.70±0.10) mmol/L, respectively, and the difference was statistically significant ( P<0.05). On the 30th day after inoculation, there were no significant differences in aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, creatinine, and urea between the normal diet group and the high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet group (all P>0.05). The hearts, livers, spleens, lungs, and kidneys of the mice in each group had no obvious toxic changes and tumor metastasis. In the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group, the expression of CD8 was up-regulated in the tumor tissues of mice, and the expressions of PD-1, CD34, LYVE-1, and collagen fibers were down-regulated. The proportion of CD8 + T cells in the paratumoral lymph nodes of the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group was (25.13±0.97)%, higher than that of the normal diet group [(20.60±2.23)%, P<0.050] and the normal diet + radiotherapy group [(19.26±3.07)%, P<0.05], but there was no statistically significant difference with the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group [(22.03±1.75)%, P>0.05]. The proportion, of CD4 + T cells in the lymph nodes adjacent to the tumor in the normal diet + radiotherapy group (31.33±5.16)% and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group (30.63±1.70)% were higher than that in the normal diet group [(20.27±2.15)%, P<0.05] and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group (23.70±2.62, P<0.05). Treg cells accounted for the highest (16.58±5.10)% of T cells in the para-tumor lymph nodes of the normal diet + radiotherapy group, but compared with the normal diet group, the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet group, and the high-fat and low-carbohydrate diet + radiotherapy group, there was no statistically significant difference (all P>0.05). Conclusion:High-fat and low-carbohydrate diet plus radiotherapy can enhance the recruitment and function of immune effector cells in the tumor microenvironment, inhibit tumor microangiogenesis, and thus inhibit tumor growth.
6.Application of tissue flap technique in breast conserving surgery for breast cancer
Mingjie YUAN ; Ying YIN ; Jianming YAN
Chinese Journal of Plastic Surgery 2024;40(6):702-708
Breast cancer surgery has been changing from radical mastectomy to modified radical mastectomy and breast-conserving surgery with less trauma and fewer complications. Breast conserving surgery has evolved into oncoplastic breast conserving surgery, which combines both breast conserving and plastic surgery. The application of autologous tissue flap is a research hotspot in oncoplastic breast conserving surgery. This article reviews the indications and contraindications of tissue flap technology in breast cancer, surgical methods and categories, application occasions of different types of tissue flaps, early and delayed postoperative complications, and the impact of different postoperative adjuvant treatments on tissue flaps, based on the latest research on oncoplastic breast conserving surgery both domestically and internationally.
7.Gastrin-releasing peptide receptor targeted PET imaging of 68Ga-DOTA-PEG 4-BBN for prostate cancer
Jiaqi YUAN ; Yaxi LI ; Dujuan LIU ; Ran REN ; Menglu LI ; Ninghan FENG ; Jianming NI
Chinese Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2024;44(5):303-308
Objective:To design and develop a molecular imaging probe of 68Ga-labeled bombesin (BBN) analogue, 68Ga-1, 4, 7, 10-tetraazacyclododecane-1, 4, 7, 10-tetraacetic acid (DOTA)-polyethylene glycol (PEG) 4-BBN, and investigate its potential to target prostate cancer with high expression of gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRPR) while minimizing uptake in pancreatic tissue. Methods:Based on the amino acid sequence of BBN peptides, the precursor DOTA-PEG 4-BBN was designed and prepared, followed by labeling with 68Ga and conducting to quality control analysis. The tumor uptake of 68Ga-DOTA-PEG 4-BBN was assessed by microPET/CT imaging on tumor-bearing nude mice models with PC3 of high GRPR expression or HT29 of low GRPR expression (3 mice per group). 68Ga-DOTA-PEG 4-BBN microPET/CT imaging was also performed on 6 tumor-bearing nude mice models with PC3, among which 3 mice were treated with gastrin-releasing peptide antagonist 1 h prior to injection of the tracer (blocked group). After imaging, the ex vivo tissues of 3 PC3 tumor-bearing nude mice of the non-blocked group were examined for radioactivity counting to evaluation the biodistribution of 68Ga-DOTA-PEG 4-BBN, and the percentage injected dose per gram of tissue (%ID/g) was calculated. Independent-sample t test was used for data analysis. Results:The synthesis of 68Ga-DOTA-PEG 4-BBN took 40 min, with the radiochemical yield of 50%-60% (no decay correction) and the radiochemical purity of over 95%. After incubation in the serum at 37 ℃ for 4 h, the radiochemical purity remained more than 95%. The microPET/CT imaging results indicated that the uptake in the PC3 tumor was 3.2 times higher than the uptake in the tumor after GRPR blockade ((1.34±0.24) vs (0.42±0.03) %ID/g; t=5.47, P=0.005). After the injection of 68Ga-DOTA-PEG 4-BBN at 1 h and following imaging for 15 min, the PC3 tumor-bearing nude mice models of the non-blocked group showed that the pancreatic uptake ((0.150±0.058) %ID/g) was significantly lower than that in kidneys, lungs and liver ((9.452±0.234), (0.720±0.041), (1.572±0.213) %ID/g) with a profound statistical distinction ( t values: 11.28-53.02, all P<0.001). The tumor/pancreas uptake ratio could reach 16.92 in the tumor-bearing nude mice models with high GRPR expression. Conclusion:A novel molecular imaging probe 68Ga-DOTA-PEG 4-BBN demonstrates specific recognition of tumors with high GRPR expression while exhibiting low uptake in the pancreas, which shows its potential in prostate cancer molecular imaging.
8.Clinical treatment guideline for pulmonary blast injury (version 2023)
Zhiming SONG ; Junhua GUO ; Jianming CHEN ; Jing ZHONG ; Yan DOU ; Jiarong MENG ; Guomin ZHANG ; Guodong LIU ; Huaping LIANG ; Hezhong CHEN ; Shuogui XU ; Yufeng ZHANG ; Zhinong WANG ; Daixing ZHONG ; Tao JIANG ; Zhiqiang XUE ; Feihu ZHOU ; Zhixin LIANG ; Yang LIU ; Xu WU ; Kaican CAI ; Yi SHEN ; Yong SONG ; Xiaoli YUAN ; Enwu XU ; Yifeng ZHENG ; Shumin WANG ; Erping XI ; Shengsheng YANG ; Wenke CAI ; Yu CHEN ; Qingxin LI ; Zhiqiang ZOU ; Chang SU ; Hongwei SHANG ; Jiangxing XU ; Yongjing LIU ; Qianjin WANG ; Xiaodong WEI ; Guoan XU ; Gaofeng LIU ; Junhui LUO ; Qinghua LI ; Bin SONG ; Ming GUO ; Chen HUANG ; Xunyu XU ; Yuanrong TU ; Liling ZHENG ; Mingke DUAN ; Renping WAN ; Tengbo YU ; Hai YU ; Yanmei ZHAO ; Yuping WEI ; Jin ZHANG ; Hua GUO ; Jianxin JIANG ; Lianyang ZHANG ; Yunfeng YI
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2023;39(12):1057-1069
Pulmonary blast injury has become the main type of trauma in modern warfare, characterized by externally mild injuries but internally severe injuries, rapid disease progression, and a high rate of early death. The injury is complicated in clinical practice, often with multiple and compound injuries. Currently, there is a lack of effective protective materials, accurate injury detection instrument and portable monitoring and transportation equipment, standardized clinical treatment guidelines in various medical centers, and evidence-based guidelines at home and abroad, resulting in a high mortality in clinlcal practice. Therefore, the Trauma Branch of Chinese Medical Association and the Editorial Committee of Chinese Journal of Trauma organized military and civilian experts in related fields such as thoracic surgery and traumatic surgery to jointly develop the Clinical treatment guideline for pulmonary blast injury ( version 2023) by combining evidence for effectiveness and clinical first-line treatment experience. This guideline provided 16 recommended opinions surrounding definition, characteristics, pre-hospital diagnosis and treatment, and in-hospital treatment of pulmonary blast injury, hoping to provide a basis for the clinical treatment in hospitals at different levels.
9.Clinical guideline on first aid for blast injury of the chest (2022 edition)
Zhiming SONG ; Jianming CHEN ; Jing ZHONG ; Yunfeng YI ; Lianyang ZHANG ; Jianxin JIANG ; Mao ZHANG ; Yang LI ; Guodong LIU ; Dingyuan DU ; Jiaxin MIN ; Xu WU ; Shuogui XU ; Anqiang ZHANG ; Yaoli WANG ; Hao TANG ; Qingshan GUO ; Yigang YU ; Xiangjun BAI ; Gang HUANG ; Zhiguang YANG ; Yunping ZHAO ; Sheng LIU ; Lijie TAN ; Lei TONG ; Xiaoli YUAN ; Yanmei ZHAO ; Haojun FAN
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2022;38(1):11-22
Blast injury of the chest injury is the most common wound in modern war trauma and terrorist attacks, and is also the most fatal type of whole body explosion injury. Most patients with severe blast injury of the chest die in the early stage before hospitalization or during transportation, so first aid is critically important. At present, there exist widespread problems such as non-standard treatment and large difference in curative effect, while there lacks clinical treatment standards for blast injury of the chest. According to the principles of scientificity, practicality and advancement, the Trauma Society of Chinese Medical Association has formulated the guidance of classification, pre-hospital first aid, in-hospital treatment and major injury management strategies for blast injury of the chest, aiming to provide reference for clinical diagnosis and treatment.
10.Size-specific dose estimations in children′s head CT scans
Tian LIAO ; Zilong YUAN ; Yantao NIU ; Qing FU ; Xiaoming LIU ; Ming YANG ; Hongying WU ; Ziqiao LEI ; Jianming YU ; Xiangchuang KONG
Chinese Journal of Radiological Medicine and Protection 2021;41(7):524-528
Objective:To investigate the value of the size-specific dose estimate (SSDE) on dose estimations of children's head CT scans.Methods:A retrospective study was conducted on plain head CT scans of 252 patients with the 64-row detector CT device of Discovery 750HD in the Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology from January to September in 2019. The volume CT dose index (CTDI vol)values were recorded. The head circumference (HC), area, and CT value were measured using a self-developed computer program, and the water equivalent diameter (WED), size-specific conversion factors ( f293 and f220), and absorbed dose (SSDE 293 and SSDE 220) were calculated according to the AAPM reports 293 and 220.The patients were divided into three groups by the quartering meth odaccording to their HC(<47.8 cm, 47.8-52.7 cm, >52.7 cm)and four groups based on their ages(0-2, 3-6, 7-10 and 11-14 years old). The difference between parameters ( f220 and f293, SSDE 220 and SSDE 293、SSDE 293 and CTDI vol) were compared for different groups, and the correlation of HC with f293 and SSDE 293 was analyzed. Results:There was an overestimation of f220 by 11.11% ( t=252.61, P<0.05) compared with f293. SSDE 220 was overestimated by 10.31% ( t=228.21, P<0.05) compared with SSDE 293, and SSDE 293 was underestimated by 9.60% ( t=-31.34, P<0.05)compared with CTDI vol. For the three HC groups, SSDE 220 was overestimated by 8.54%, 10.37%, and 11.57% ( t=73.73, 438.58, 275.52, P<0.05)compared with SSDE 293, and SSDE 293 was underestimated by 1.30%, 9.79%, and 14.61% ( t=-1.91, -60.95, -47.64, P<0.05)compared with CTDI vol. For the four age groups SSDE 220 was overestimated by 8.45%, 10.00%, 10.57%, and 11.36% ( t=63.58, 232.29, 247.84, 302.95, P< 0.05)compared with SSDE 293, and SSDE 293 was underestimated by 1.49%, 8.27%, 10.63%, and 13.78% ( t=-1.83, -28.27, -37.30, -49.80, P< 0.05)compared with CTDI vol. Furthermore, HC was highly correlated with f293 and SSDE 293 ( r2=0.88 and 0.76, respectively, P< 0.05). Conclusions:The radiation dose in children′s head CT scanning can be more accurately estimated according to the AAPM Report 293, while it can be overestimated by CTDI vol. Meanwhile, the CT radiation dose can be patently overestimated with the AAPM Report 220 compared with Report 293.HC is closely correlated with f293 and SSDE 293 and it can be used to estimatee more accurately for SSDE and the radiation dose received by children during head CT scanning.

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail