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1.
The use of lung scintigraphy in evaluating suspected pulmonary embolism (PE) is controversial. Several diagnostic methods have been described for lung scans, of which the most widely applied uses 99mTc-MAA for perfusion, 133Xe for ventilation and PIOPED diagnostic criteria. This study evaluates the accuracy of lung scintigraphy using an alternative ventilation agent, 99mTc-diethylenetriamine pentacetic acid (DTPA) aerosol, and specific criteria. METHODS: Diagnostic criteria for DTPA aerosol ventilation were prospectively applied to 5017 patients over a 9-yr period. Lung scan interpretations were analyzed for frequency of occurrence, and results were compared to those of angiography in 455 patients. RESULTS: Scans were interpreted as normal, low or high probability in 79% of patients and as either indeterminate or medium probability in 21% of patients. Three patients had normal scans and negative angiography. In patients with low-probability scans, 111 angiograms were performed: 103 (93%) were negative, and 8 (7%) were positive. In patients with indeterminate scans, 114 angiograms were performed: 85 (75%) were negative, and 29 (25%) were positive. In patients with medium-probability scans, 149 angiograms were performed: 86 (58%) were negative, and 63 (42%) were positive. In patients with high-probability scans, 78 angiograms were performed: 6 (8%) were negative, and 72 (92%) were positive. CONCLUSION: These results indicate that lung scintigraphy using DTPA aerosol and our criteria is accurate in diagnosing and stratifying risk of pulmonary embolic disease. Compared with 133Xe and PIOPED criteria, DTPA ventilation and our criteria reduced the false-negative rate in low-probability scans (7% versus 16%, p < 0.005) and decreased the fraction of intermediate-probability scans (21 % versus 39%, p < 0.01).  相似文献   

2.
Inhalation and perfusion scintigrams, general radiological examination of the thorax and an EKG were done on 43 patients with clinically suspected pulmonary embolism. In 11 cases, the clinical diagnosis could be confirmed on the basis of the scintigraphic examination. In the remaining 32 patients, an embolich event could be excluded by pulmonary scintigram, radiological examination and later the clinical course. A synopsis of clinical observations, X-ray and scintigraphy, therefore, permitted a basically reliable diagnosis of pulmonary embolism; selective pulmonary angiography should be used only in exceptional cases.  相似文献   

3.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the accuracy of spiral CT angiography in the diagnosis of central pulmonary embolism (PE). MATERIAL AND METHODS: A retrospective study was undertaken in a population of 90 patients who were evaluated with spiral CT angiography (acquisition: 12 to 24 s with or without strict apnea; injection of 90 cm3 of 12, 20 or 30% contrast material at a rate of 4 to 7 cm3, selective pulmonary angiography of each lung (n = 55) and/or ventilation-perfusion (VP) scanning (n = 35). RESULTS: Among the 55 patients evaluated with both spiral CT and angiography, central pulmonary embolism was excluded in 19 patients (34%), assessed in 29 patients (53%) whereas CT examination was considered as inconclusive in 7 patients (13%) due to interpretive difficulties at the level of obliquely oriented arteries and/or presence of hilar lymph nodes (sensitivity: 90.5%; specificity: 82.6%). With spiral CT, the finding of 95 central emboli (3 main, 61 lobar and 31 segmental) corresponded exactly to the angiographic findings; spiral CT enabled direct visualization of intraluminal filling defects (n = 95) whereas the angiographic recognition of PE was based on direct (n = 57) and indirect (n = 38) signs. Spiral CT angiography was more sensitive and specific than VP scanning. CONCLUSION: Spiral CT angiography appears as a sensitive and specific noninvasive method for the diagnosis of central PE.  相似文献   

4.
To assess the value of perfusion lung scan in the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism, we prospectively evaluated 890 consecutive patients with suspected pulmonary embolism. Prior to lung scanning, each patient was assigned a clinical probability of pulmonary embolism (very likely, possible, unlikely). Perfusion scans were independently classified as follows: (1) normal, (2) near-normal, (3) abnormal compatible with pulmonary embolism (PE+: single or multiple wedge-shaped perfusion defects), or (4) abnormal not compatible with pulmonary embolism (PE-: perfusion defects other than wedge-shaped). The study design required pulmonary angiography and clinical and scintigraphic follow-up in all patients with abnormal scans. Of 890 scans, 220 were classified as normal/or near-normal and 670 as abnormal. A definitive diagnosis was established in 563 (84%) patients with abnormal scans. The overall prevalence of pulmonary embolism was 39%. Most patients with angiographically proven pulmonary embolism had PE+ scans (sensitivity: 92%). Conversely, most patients without emboli on angiography had PE- scans (specificity: 87%). A PE+ scan associated with a very likely or possible clinical presentation of pulmonary embolism had positive predictive values of 99 and 92%, respectively. A PE- scan paired with an unlikely clinical presentation had a negative predictive value of 97%. Clinical assessment combined with perfusion-scan evaluation established or excluded pulmonary embolism in the majority of patients with abnormal scans. Our data indicate that accurate diagnosis of pulmonary embolism is possible by perfusion scanning alone, without ventilation imaging. Combining perfusion scanning with clinical assessment helps to restrict the need for angiography to a minority of patients with suspected pulmonary embolism.  相似文献   

5.
NONINVASIVE PROCEDURE: Helical CT angiography is a noninvasive procedure whose only relative contraindications are renal insufficiency and iodine allergy. MASSIVE PULMONARY EMBOLISM: If a massive pulmonary embolism is suspected, helical CT angiography is the examination of choice because of its high accuracy in detecting proximal thrombi and its safety profile. NON-MASSIVE PULMONARY EMBOLISM: If a non massive pulmonary embolism is suspected, helical CT angiography, because of its high specificity, can be the first examination instead of scintigraphy. If a thrombus is depicted by CT, the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism is confirmed and treatment is started. If no thrombus is visualized by CT, pulmonary embolism can be ruled out in most cases. In case of doubt, another noninvasive procedure should be performed. Angiography should be the exception and seldom is needed.  相似文献   

6.
OBJECTIVE: This study examines the anatomic distribution of emboli on pulmonary angiography and attempts to determine the relationship of vessel size to interobserver agreement, two factors having important implications in comparing pulmonary angiography with cross-sectional imaging for pulmonary embolism. MATERIALS AND METHODS: One hundred twenty-five consecutive pulmonary angiograms were reviewed retrospectively by three interventional radiologists. Initial interpretations were recorded and compared to determine interobserver agreement on a per-patient and per-embolus basis. Discordant interpretations were reviewed by all radiologists for a consensus interpretation. RESULTS: Unanimous per-patient agreement occurred in 91% (114/125) of initial interpretations. The largest artery containing acute pulmonary embolism was segmental or larger in 24 patients (83% of patients with acute positive findings, 19% of all patients) and subsegmental in only five patients (17% and 4%, respectively). On a per-patient basis, initial interobserver agreement averaged 45% and unanimous consensus agreement was achieved for 79% of patients having isolated subsegmental pulmonary embolism. Consensus readings altered initial per-patient interpretations for 30% of patients having only subsegmental pulmonary embolism; per-embolus interpretations were altered for 37% of all subsegmental emboli. CONCLUSION: Subsegmental emboli occurring as isolated findings are relatively rare. Approximately one third of subsegmental emboli and one third of patients having isolated subsegmental emboli may be initially misdiagnosed on pulmonary angiography. Objections to cross-sectional imaging for pulmonary embolism based on the inability to detect subsegmental pulmonary embolism when compared with pulmonary angiography should be reexamined with this data in mind.  相似文献   

7.
Fifty-eight consecutive patients with clinical symptoms of pulmonary embolism/infarction were examined by ultrasound as the first imaging modality. The diagnosis was confirmed in 35 patients by ventilation-perfusion scintigraphy; 13 underwent pulmonary angiography for verification of clinical diagnosis. Seven patients died, necropsy was performed and the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism was confirmed in six cases; three patients were submitted to transthoracic lung biopsy. Intercostal space and an additional small pleural effusion in 48% of the examined patients served as a sonic window for the 5 MHz sector scanner. In 42 of the 54 cases with a final diagnosis of pulmonary embolism/infarction a total of 69, hypoechoic, lesions with a pleural basis were detected. These were conspicuous, predominantly triangular, of a mean size 4.6 x 3.7 cm (range 9 x 8 to 2 x 1.5). A hyperechoic structure with reverberation artefacts suggestive of air was frequently visible in the centre: a sign of segmental involvement. The ultrasound examination yielded a true positive result in 41 cases. The overall sensitivity was 98% and the specificity 66%. The prevalence of pulmonary embolism was 83% and the diagnostic accuracy 90%. This suggests that chest sonography can be an efficient technique in the detection of pulmonary infarction.  相似文献   

8.
The objective of this study was to define the limits of echocardiography and to evaluate thoracic spiral CT angiography (TSCTA) for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE). One hundred twelve consecutive patients, hospitalised for suspected PE, were included in this prospective study. All were investigated by pulmonary ventilation-perfusion scintigraphy (Sc) and 50 had a high probability of PE on this examination. Sc was normal in 22 patients. Forty patients were excluded because of an intermediate probability. In 50 patients with PE confirmed on Sc, transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) showed only indirect evidence of PE (intracavitary thrombus in 4% of cases). TSCTA demonstrated PE in 82% of cases and did not show any thrombus image when Sc was normal. Its negative predictive value was therefore 70% and its positive predictive value was 100%. Its sensitivity varied according to degree of perfusion defect (96% in the case of lobar lesion, 66% in the case of segmental lesion and 16% for a subsegmental lesion). Multidimensional transoesophageal echocardiography (TOE), performed in 37 of the 50 patients with PE, only revealed thrombi in the pulmonary tree in 3 patients (8%), all presenting severe PE. No thrombus was visualized on TOE in patients with non-serious PE. All thrombi observed on TOE were also demonstrated by TSCTA. In conclusion, TTE usually provides only indirect signs of PE. TOE has a poor diagnostic sensitivity for PE. TSCTA has a better sensitivity than TOE for the detection of thrombi in the pulmonary artery trunk and proximal centimetres of its two branches, but normal CT angiography cannot exclude a distal PE.  相似文献   

9.
PURPOSE: To determine whether axial spiral computed tomography (CT) allows detection of the replaced hepatic artery as part of preoperative planning for pancreatic tumor resection. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Axial spiral CT scans (8-mm section thickness, 4-mm overlapping reconstructions) were obtained in 50 patients with periampullary tumor and were examined by three radiologists. Readers' interpretations were compared with angiographic results. RESULTS: Eight patients had an aberrant hepatic artery. Two of the three readers detected or suspected all of these abnormalities (100% sensitivity), and one reader identified seven of eight aberrant arteries (88% sensitivity). However, readers requested angiographic confirmation in 14 of 24 tests. Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 96%, 87%, and 88%, respectively, for all readers. CONCLUSION: Axial spiral CT may simplify preoperative evaluation of periampullary tumors. However, angiographic support was necessary in most cases in this study. Improvements in CT techniques may eventually allow spiral CT to replace angiography in the examination of these patients.  相似文献   

10.
PURPOSE: To test the usefulness of lower limb Doppler venous compression ultrasound (US) and serum D-dimer measurements in diagnosis of pulmonary embolism in patients in whom ventilation-perfusion (V-P) scans indicate intermediate probability of pulmonary embolism. MATERIALS AND METHODS: V-P scanning, pulmonary angiography, US, and D-dimer measurements were performed in 36 patients without known deep venous thrombosis but with intermediate probability of having a pulmonary embolism. RESULTS: Pulmonary angiography demonstrated pulmonary embolism in 15 (41%) of 36 patients. US demonstrated deep venous thrombosis in only two patients, both with pulmonary embolism. Sensitivity of US was only 13%, but specificity was 100%. Five (14%) of the 36 patients had normal (< 220 micrograms/L) D-dimer levels; none of the five had pulmonary embolism. Sensitivity and specificity of D-dimer values were 100% and 16%, respectively, with a negative predictive value of 100%. CONCLUSION: Combined D-dimer measurement and US were helpful in correctly diagnosing pulmonary embolism in only seven (20%) of 36 patients. Pulmonary angiography is still required to diagnose pulmonary embolism in the majority of patients.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: Hypereosinophilic syndrome (eosinophilia without demonstrable cause) commonly involves eosinophilic infiltration of the liver and spleen, but few reports have described the imaging findings. Accordingly, we reviewed the imaging findings in five patients with this syndrome in whom the liver was involved. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Five patients who had hypereosinophilic syndrome with hepatic involvement were included in the study. The diagnosis of hepatic involvement was based on pathologic proof in two patients and on imaging and laboratory findings in the other three. Histologic examination of the hepatic lesions showed extensive eosinophilic infiltration in two patients and centrilobular necrosis in one. All patients had chest radiography, barium studies of the gastrointestinal tract, abdominal CT, and sonography. Four patients had hepatosplenic scintigraphy. All patients were followed up for 4-24 months. RESULTS: All patients had mild to marked hepatomegaly with multiple focal lesions. Focal lesions were detected on sonograms in three patients, on CT scans in four, and on scintigrams in three. On sonograms, the lesions were usually small (less than 2 cm in diameter), sharply or poorly defined nodules with varied echogenicity scattered throughout the liver. The lesions were hypodense with poorly defined margins on CT scans and appeared as variably sized areas of decreased radionuclide uptake on scintigrams. For each patient, the number, size, and shape of the lesions varied considerably from one imaging study to another. On follow-up studies 2-6 months after treatment, the appearance of the liver was normal. Other radiologic findings included transient pulmonary infiltrates (two patients), mild cardiomegaly (one patient), and mild lymphadenopathy (three patients). CONCLUSION: Hypereosinophilic syndrome is a cause of focal hepatic lesions seen on sonograms, CT scans, or scintigrams. The lesions are characterized by the varied appearance on the different types of images and the disappearance of the lesions with treatment.  相似文献   

12.
The diagnosis of pulmonary embolism is even in contemporary clinical practice problematical. Pulmonary angiography is used in our departments very little due to its invasive character. The method of choice for diagnosis remains therefore perfusion scintigraphy of the lungs, in this country frequently without ventilation scintigraphy as it is not available in the majority of our departments of nuclear medicine. In recent years in the diagnostic algorithms also assessment of D-dimers was started, i.e. assessment of products of fibrinolysis assessed by monoclonal antibodies. The authors tried to find out how many patients admitted to the medical department for diagnosis of pulmonary embolization may have a false positive diagnosis on the basis of pulmonary scintigraphy. During the period III/96 to V/96 a total of 18 patients from the medical clinic with suspected pulmonary embolism were examined where the value of D-dimers(latex test) was assessed and at the same time perfusion scintigraphy was performed. With regard to the highly negative predictive value of D-dimer assessment the authors focused their attention on patients with a suspect or positive lung scan (i.e. treated on account of pulmonary embolism) while D-dimers were negative. Of 13 patients with suspect or possible pulmonary embolism, as assessed by scintigraphy, four had negative dimers(30%). With regard to the 90% reported negative predictive value, based on the literature, thus three of these patients were unnecessarily admitted to hospital and treated. The authors assume that assessment of D-dimers should be part of the examination protocol due to its non-pretentious character and low price as compared with costs of hospitalization.  相似文献   

13.
PURPOSE: Evaluation of the impact, indications, and therapeutic efficiency of chest CT in intensive-care and emergency patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospective assessment of 741 consecutive chest CT, or which 74% were acquired in the spiral technique, in intensive-care and emergency patients. Chest CT scans and respective clinical data were compared. RESULTS: 16% of all examinations were indicated to resolve questions arising from the chest radiogram, 10% to confirm or exclude pulmonary embolisms and 10% to confirm or exclude aortic dissection. In 10% a focus of infection was sought. 57% of all CT examinations had an impact on therapy, in 7% further diagnostic tests were prompted. Among a total of 588 clinical decisions based upon chest CT, the most frequent therapeutic conclusions consisted in: minimally invasive CT guided interventions in 17%. A new drug was administered in 13%, surgical intervention was performed in 13%, bed-side interventions such as insertion of a drainage tube in 13%, and a given pharmacological therapy was continued in 11%. CONCLUSION: Chest CT has a strong impact on patient management in emergency and critical-care medicine. CT guided interventions are frequently used in critically-ill patients. The introduction of the spiral technique has led to important new CT indications in the field of non-invasive vascular diagnosis, namely the assessment of pulmonary embolism and aortic dissection.  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVES: The risk of thromboembolism in patients taking estrogen-progestagen oral contraceptive drugs has apparently increased since the introduction of third-generation progestagens (desogestrel, gestodene). We examined the clinical features, risk factors and outcome of pulmonary embolism in this context. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We reviewed 11 cases of thromboembolism in patients on oral contraception and hospitalized in emergency situations in 1995 and 1996 for pulmonary embolism in order to determine the gravity of the thromboembolic event, risk factors and type of drug used. RESULTS: Early clinical signs had preceded the onset of embolism by 2 to 164 days. PaO2 was below 70 mmHg in 4 patients. Diagnosis was achieved with pulmonary scintigraphy (11 cases), spiral CT (3 cases) and angiopneumography (2 cases). Duplex Doppler visualized the phlebitis in 7 patients. Given heparin (with fibrinolysis in 3 cases) then anti-vitamin K, and after withdrawal of the oral contraceptive, outcome was favorable in all cases. There were no recurrences. The nature of the oral contraceptive varied. Five patients were taking third-generation progestagens. In two cases, embolism had occurred following a change from a second-generation to a third-generation progestagen. Family history of phlebitis and/or abnormal laboratory findings were observed in 6 patients: resistance to activated protein C (2 patients), protein C deficiency (2 patients), anticardiolipin (2 patients) and low-titre antinuclear antibodies (2 patients). CONCLUSION: Pulmonary embolism in patients on oral contraceptives persists despite changes in the hormone content of the drugs. Diagnosis is often delayed. Family history of thrombosis or biological risk factors are often found.  相似文献   

15.
PURPOSE: To determine the prevalence of unsuspected pulmonary embolism (PE) on routine thoracic helical computed tomographic (CT) scans and to quantify the improvement in PE detection by using a cine-paging mode on a workstation instead of hard-copy review. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Seven hundred eighty-five patients referred for routine contrast medium-enhanced thoracic CT within 9 months were prospectively recruited. Helical CT was performed. Studies were prospectively interpreted by four radiologists. Two radiologists performed routine, undirected, hard-copy consensus review for official interpretation; two of three thoracic radiologists independently performed a dedicated workstation-based search for PE. The presence of PE involving the main, lobar, or segmental pulmonary arteries was assigned a score of 1-5 (1 = definitely negative, 5 = definitely positive) by each independent reviewer. Patients with a score of 4 or 5 underwent lower-extremity ultrasound, ventilation-perfusion scintigraphy, or both, followed by pulmonary CT angiography if the findings were still equivocal. RESULTS: Twelve (1.5%) of the 785 patients had unsuspected PE, with an inpatient prevalence of 5% (eight of 160) and an outpatient prevalence of 0.6% (four of 625). Of the 12 patients with unsuspected PE, 10 (83%) had cancer. Of the 81 inpatients with cancer, seven (9%) had unsuspected PE. A dedicated workstation-based search resulted in detection of PE in three more patients (25%) than did hard-copy interpretation. CONCLUSION: The prevalence of unsuspected PE was highest among inpatients with cancer. A directed, workstation-based search can improve the PE detection rate over that with hard-copy review.  相似文献   

16.
PURPOSE: To determine the specificity and prognostic significance of computed tomography (CT) of the chest in pediatric Wilms' tumor. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients treated for newly diagnosed Wilms' tumor at St Jude Children's Research Hospital between December 1978 and July 1995 were included in the study if an initial chest radiograph and CT were available and if pulmonary involvement (determined by chest radiographs) was absent. For the 202 patients studied, radiographs and CT scans were reviewed blindly and independently by three experienced radiologists for the presence of pulmonary nodules. Outcome variables consisted of intraobserver variability (in a subsample of 40 cases) and concordance between ratings on radiographs and CT scans (both by McNemar's test), interrater variability (by logistic regression), and the cumulative incidence of pulmonary relapse for patients with and without positive CT scans, by reviewer. RESULTS: As expected, ratings of pulmonary involvement on radiographs were discordant with CT ratings. There was marked variability among reviewers in CT ratings (P = .0001). Of 202 CT scans, 78 were read as positive by at least one reviewer, 41 were rated positive by only one reviewer, 18 by two reviewers, and 19 by all three. Intrarater variability on repeat reviews was not significant. Patients with nodules identified on CT had a significantly higher pulmonary relapse rate when analyzed separately by reviewer. However, for the 14 patients who had pulmonary relapse, CT scans were rated positive by all three reviewers in only five cases and as negative by all three in another five cases. CONCLUSION: The variability in interpretation of chest CT scans in patients with Wilms' tumor limits the predictive utility of these studies. Optimal, standardized techniques and central review are essential if chest CT is to be used for staging in cooperative studies.  相似文献   

17.
The recently developed technique of spiral computed tomographic angiography (CTA) is being used for the detection of pulmonary emboli (PE), and several studies have assessed its accuracy using pulmonary angiography as the gold standard. CTA shows a high level of accuracy in the detection of pulmonary emboli in segmental or larger central vessels. The specificity is high enough to eliminate the requirement for angiography if a positive CTA result is found. The main factor limiting the sensitivity of CTA is the frequency of peripheral emboli in the vessels outside the central chest field covered by CTA. The incidence of such peripheral emboli varies in different reports from 0% to 36%, and their significance remains arguable. Interpretative criteria for V./Q.- lung scintigraphy have been refined as a result of the lessons learned from the PIOPED study. Using these modified criteria, and taking into account the prior probability of PE based on the presence or absence of clinical risk factors, treatment decisions can be reasonably made in patients in the following categories: those with normal lung scans, those with high probability scans and high prior probability of PE, and those with low probability scans and low clinical suspicion. Patients with intermediate probability or indeterminate scans, and those in whom the scan results conflict with the clinical expectation, will need further tests. Ultrasound examination of the leg veins, if positive, will select a further subgroup of patients for active treatment. Patients with a negative or inconclusive ultrasound result, who previously have been candidates for pulmonary angiography, can now go on to CTA. The advantages in specificity which CTA offers will make it an important part of the diagnostic workup for selected patients, but in view of its increased cost and high radiation dose compared with V./Q. scintigraphy, the argument that CTA should completely replace lung scintigraphy is currently unsupportable.  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND: Patients with suspected pulmonary embolism often have nondiagnostic lung scans and may present in circumstances where lung scanning is unavailable. Levels of D-dimer, a fibrin-specific product, are increased in patients with acute thrombosis; this may simplify the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. OBJECTIVE: To determine the sensitivity and specificity of a whole-blood D-dimer assay in patients with suspected pulmonary embolism and in subgroups of patients with low pretest probability of pulmonary embolism or nondiagnostic lung scans. DESIGN: Prospective cohort. SETTING: Four tertiary care hospitals. PATIENTS: 1177 consecutive patients with suspected pulmonary embolism. MEASUREMENTS: All patients underwent an assessment of pretest probability by use of a standardized clinical model, a D-dimer assay, ventilation-perfusion lung scanning, and bilateral compression ultrasonography. Patients in whom pulmonary embolism was not initially diagnosed were followed for 3 months. Accordingly, patients were categorized as positive or negative for pulmonary embolism. RESULTS: Of the 1177 patients, 197 (17%) were classified as positive for pulmonary embolism. Overall, the D-dimer assay showed a sensitivity of 84.8% and a specificity of 68.4%. In 703 patients (3.4%) with a low pretest probability of pulmonary embolism, the likelihood ratio associated with a negative D-dimer test result was 0.27, resulting in a posterior probability of 1.0% (95% CI, 0.3% to 2.2%). In 698 patients with nondiagnostic lung scans (previous probability, 7.4%), the likelihood ratio associated with a negative D-dimer test result was 0.36, resulting in a posterior probability of 2.8% (CI, 1.4% to 4.8%). CONCLUSIONS: A normal D-dimer test result is useful in excluding pulmonary embolism in patients with a low pretest probability of pulmonary embolism or a nondiagnostic lung scan.  相似文献   

19.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this investigation is to determine the prevalence of acute pulmonary embolism (PE) limited to subsegmental pulmonary arteries. BACKGROUND: Contrast-enhanced helical (spiral) and electron-beam CT, in the hands of experienced radiologists who are skillful with this modality, are sensitive for the detection of acute PE in central pulmonary arteries, but have a low sensitivity for the detection of PE limited to subsegmental pulmonary arteries. The potential for CT to diagnose PE, therefore, is partially dependent on the prevalence of PE limited to subsegmental pulmonary arteries. METHODS: Data are from the Prospective Investigation of Pulmonary Embolism Diagnosis (PIOPED). The largest pulmonary arteries that showed PE, as interpreted by the PIOPED angiographic readers, were identified in 375 patients in PIOPED with angiographically diagnosed PE. RESULTS: Among all patients with PE, 6% (95% confidence interval [CI], 4 to 9%) had PE limited to subsegmental branches of the pulmonary artery. Patients with high-probability ventilation/ perfusion (V/Q) scans had PE limited to subsegmental branches in only 1% (95% CI, 0 to 4%). Among patients with low-probability V/Q lung scans, 17% (95% CI, 8 to 29%) had PE limited to the subsegmental branches. Patients with low-probability V/Q scans and no prior cardiopulmonary disease had PE limited to the subsegmental pulmonary arteries in 30% (95% CI, 13 to 53%), whereas patients with low-probability V/Q scans who had prior cardiopulmonary disease had PE limited to subsegmental pulmonary arteries in 8% (95% CI, 2 to 22%) (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Based on data from all patients with PE in PIOPED, the prevalence of PE limited to subsegmental pulmonary arteries is low, 6%. PE limited to subsegmental pulmonary arteries was most prevalent among patients with low-probability V/Q scans, particularly if they had no prior cardiopulmonary disease.  相似文献   

20.
The shunt flow from the coronary artery to pulmonary arteries was evaluated in 6 patients with coronary-pulmonary fistula by lung perfusion scintigraphy with technetium-99m macroaggregated albumin. In 2 patients, whose degree of visualization of pulmonary arteries by coronary angiography was relatively high, lung perfusion scintigrams demonstrated the defects at the distal of coronary-pulmonary fistulas.  相似文献   

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