Premium
Diagnostic Benefit of Echocontrast Enhancement for the Insufficient Transtemporal Bone Window
Author(s) -
Nabavi Darius G.,
Droste Dirk W.,
SchulteAitedorneburg Gernot,
Kemèny Vendel,
Panzica Martin,
Weber Sepp,
Ringelstein E. Bernd
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of neuroimaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.822
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1552-6569
pISSN - 1051-2284
DOI - 10.1111/jon199992102
Subject(s) - medicine , neurovascular bundle , radiology , medical diagnosis , confidence interval , image quality , medical imaging , ultrasound , nuclear medicine , surgery , artificial intelligence , computer science , image (mathematics)
Echocontrast agents (ECA) are known to improve transcranial color‐coded duplex (TCCD) imaging, but its diagnostic benefit in the routine clinical setting has not clearly been defined. The authors investigated the diagnostic benefit of ECA application in 54 patients with insufficient transtemporal bone window, consecutively referred to their ultrasound laboratory. According to the precontrast imaging quality, patients were assigned to three categories: A, no intracranial structures or vessel segments visible on B‐mode imaging and TCCD (n = 5); and intracranial structures visible on B‐mode imaging and vessel segments less than 5 mm in length (B, n = 21 ), or larger than 5 mm in length (C, n = 28) visible on TCCD. The effect of the echocontrast enhancement was assessed with respect to signal enhancement, imaging quality, and diagnostic confidence. In 49 out of 54 patients (91%), a significant improvement of the imaging quality was noted, enabling 43 (80%) neurovascular diagnoses of sufficient diagnostic confidence. The diagnostic ECA effect was strongly dependent on the precontrast imaging quality: upon echoenhancement, a satisfactory image quality was obtained in none of the patients of category A, as opposed to 16 (76%) and 27 (96%) patients of categories B and C, respectively. In summary, in 80% of our consecutive patient series with insufficient transtemporal bone window, application of ECA allowed for a conclusive TCCD study. Properties of the transtemporal precontrast scans are strongly predictive of the diagnostic benefit and should be taken into the decisive consideration.