Rationale and objectives: Cross-sectional area <5 mm(2) (CSA<5) is a computed tomography (CT) metric that has been used for the evaluation of pulmonary vessel alterations and perfusion. CSA<5 is calculated from three axial slices; thus, whether CSA<5 represents the small pulmonary vessel alterations in the whole lung remains unclear. The purpose of this study was to compare the measurements of CSA<5 using three axial slices and coronal reconstructed slices in the relationship between the measured CSA<5 and pulmonary perfusion measured using lung perfusion scintigraphy.
Materials and methods: This study comprised 28 subjects who underwent both noncontrast CT and lung perfusion scintigraphy. The present study measured CSA<5 using both three axial CT images and coronal reconstruction images and then obtained the percentage of the CSA in right lung to that in whole lung (R/W-CSA<5). Using anteroposterior and posteroanterior projections on technetium-99m macroaggregated albumin (MAA) lung perfusion scintigraphy, we obtained right and total lung counts and calculated the percentage of the right to whole lung counts (R/W-MAA). The correlations of the R/W-CSA<5 calculated using three axial slices (R/W-CSA(A)x<5) and coronal reconstructed slices (R/W-CSA(COR)<5) with R/W-MAA were evaluated using Spearman rank correlation analysis.
Results: Both R/W-CSA(Ax)<5 and R/W-CSA(COR)<5 were significantly correlated with R/W-MAA; however, the correlation coefficient with R/W-CSA(COR)<5 (ρ = 0.842, P < .0001) was greater than that with R/W-CSA(Ax)<5 (ρ = 0.631, P = .0004).
Conclusions: Coronal reconstruction images appear suitable for quantitative measurement of CSA of small pulmonary vessels.
Keywords: Pulmonary vessels; computed tomography; pulmonary perfusion; quantitative; reconstruction.
Copyright © 2014 AUR. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.