|
|
||||||||
Original Research |
1 Interventional and Diagnostic Adaptative Imaging, INSERM ERI 13, Nancy
University, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Nancy (TD4), Rue du Morvan, 54511
Vandœuvre-les-Nancy CEDEX, France.
2 Department of Radiology, Service d'Imagerie Guilloz, Centre Hospitalier
Universitaire, Nancy, France.
3 Siemens Medical Solutions, Saint Denis, France.
4 Cristal Laboratory, Necker Hospital, Paris, France.
5 Department of Urology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Nancy, France.
OBJECTIVE. Our aim was to determine, using CT attenuation values, the chemical composition of 241 human renal stones placed in a jelly phantom and to analyze the influence of respiratory motion on the classification.
MATERIALS AND METHODS. The stones were placed in a jelly simulating the X-ray attenuation of the kidneys. A dynamic platform was used to apply to the phantom free-breathing motion (sinusoidal motion in z-axis) and motion due to lack of maintenance of a breath-hold (5 mm·s–1 in z-axis). Determination of the chemical composition was performed with mean CT attenuation values obtained at 80 and 120 kV and with dual-energy CT attenuation values.
RESULTS. Two hundred forty-one human urinary stones were classified into six groups: uric acid, cystine, struvite, weddellite (calcium oxalate dihydrate), whewellite (calcium oxalate monohydrate), and brushite. With no motion, the use of dual energy enabled differentiation of all of the types of stones with statistically significant differences. Uric acid (–20 ± 22 H), cystine (106 ± 19 H), struvite (271 ± 16 H), weddellite (323 ± 5 H), brushite (415 ± 30 H), and whewellite (510 ± 17 H) were identified as distinct groups. Motion-induced mean CT attenuation values were significantly different from those obtained with no motion. With motion, dual-energy CT attenuation values did not allow differentiation of all stone types.
CONCLUSION. Dual-energy CT attenuation values can be used to predict the chemical composition of stones in vitro. However, when slight motion is applied to renal stones during image acquisition, the values become significantly different from those obtained with no motion. Consequently, confusion arises in differentiating stone types. A perfect breath-hold has to be performed for in vivo use of attenuation value to discern stone type.
Keywords: chemical composition CT attenuation value nephrolithiasis renal stones respiration motion
![]()
CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
L.-J. Zhang, Y.-E Zhao, S.-Y. Wu, B. M. Yeh, C.-S. Zhou, X.-B. Hu, Q.-J. Hu, and G.-M. Lu Pulmonary Embolism Detection with Dual-Energy CT: Experimental Study of Dual-Source CT in Rabbits Radiology, July 1, 2009; 252(1): 61 - 70. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
D. T. Boll, N. A. Patil, E. K. Paulson, E. M. Merkle, W. N. Simmons, S. A. Pierre, and G. M. Preminger Renal Stone Assessment with Dual-Energy Multidetector CT and Advanced Postprocessing Techniques: Improved Characterization of Renal Stone Composition--Pilot Study Radiology, March 1, 2009; 250(3): 813 - 820. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |