PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - M.-N. Psychogios AU - J.-H. Buhk AU - P. Schramm AU - A. Xyda AU - A. Mohr AU - M. Knauth TI - Feasibility of Angiographic CT in Peri-Interventional Diagnostic Imaging: A Comparative Study with Multidetector CT AID - 10.3174/ajnr.A2086 DP - 2010 Aug 01 TA - American Journal of Neuroradiology PG - 1226--1231 VI - 31 IP - 7 4099 - http://www.ajnr.org/content/31/7/1226.short 4100 - http://www.ajnr.org/content/31/7/1226.full SO - Am. J. Neuroradiol.2010 Aug 01; 31 AB - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The ability to perform neuroimaging on the angiography suite is important in making decisions during neurointerventions. Our aim was the evaluation of ACT as a fast available diagnostic tool during and after neuroendovascular procedures and the comparison of ACT with postinterventional MDCT. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighty-four peri-interventional ACT acquisitions were obtained and evaluated: 38 after coil embolization of cerebral aneurysms, 16 after intracranial angioplasty with stent placement, and 30 after endovascular mechanical thrombectomy and lysis. Interventions and ACTs were performed on a biplane angiography system equipped with flat panel detectors. Postprocessing was performed on a dedicated workstation, and multiplanar reformations were generated. Reference studies were performed on a 16- or 128-section MDCT scanner. All studies were independently evaluated by 3 blinded neuroradiologists. The Wilcoxon test was applied for the statistical analysis. RESULTS: ACT and MDCT images were of equal diagnostic quality in most cases related to the supratentorial ventricular system and the detection of hemorrhages (subarachnoidal, intraparenchymal, and intraventricular). Regarding the supratentorial ventricular system, an adequate diagnostic quality was assigned to 94% of the ACT acquisitions. For the detection of hemorrhage, no statistically significant difference was noted between ACT and MDCT. However, for the infratentorial region, ACT performed relatively poorly compared with MDCT. The diagnostic evaluation of gray matter (basal ganglia, insular cortex, and central cortex) by ACT is not sufficient, with <20% of the acquisitions scoring a diagnostic value. CONCLUSIONS: After neuroendovascular procedures and within the angiography suite, ACT enables an immediate detection of peri-interventional hemorrhage or hydrocephalus. However, for the detection of cerebral infarction, ACT is not yet reliable. ACTangiographic CTCTDIwweighted CT dose indexDSAdigital subtraction angiographyEVDexternal ventricular drainage catheterHUHounsfield unitICHintracerebral hemorrhageIPHintraparenchymal hemorrhageIVHintraventricular hemorrhageκwweighted κMDCTmultidetector CTMPRmultiplanar reformationsSAHsubarachnoidal hemorrhageSTsection thickness