Author:
Paun Bruno,Leon Daniel García,Cabello Alex Claveria,Pages Roso Mares,de la Calle Vargas Elena,Muñoz Paola Contreras,Garcia Vanessa Venegas,Castell-Conesa Joan,Baleriola Mario Marotta,Camacho Jose Raul Herance
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Skeletal muscle injury characterisation during healing supports trauma prognosis. Given the potential interest of computed tomography (CT) in muscle diseases and lack of in vivo CT methodology to image skeletal muscle wound healing, we tracked skeletal muscle injury recovery using in vivo micro-CT in a rat model to obtain a predictive model.
Methods
Skeletal muscle injury was performed in 23 rats. Twenty animals were sorted into five groups to image lesion recovery at 2, 4, 7, 10, or 14 days after injury using contrast-enhanced micro-CT. Injury volumes were quantified using a semiautomatic image processing, and these values were used to build a prediction model. The remaining 3 rats were imaged at all monitoring time points as validation. Predictions were compared with Bland-Altman analysis.
Results
Optimal contrast agent dose was found to be 20 mL/kg injected at 400 μL/min. Injury volumes showed a decreasing tendency from day 0 (32.3 ± 12.0mm3, mean ± standard deviation) to day 2, 4, 7, 10, and 14 after injury (19.6 ± 12.6, 11.0 ± 6.7, 8.2 ± 7.7, 5.7 ± 3.9, and 4.5 ± 4.8 mm3, respectively). Groups with single monitoring time point did not yield significant differences with the validation group lesions. Further exponential model training with single follow-up data (R2 = 0.968) to predict injury recovery in the validation cohort gave a predictions root mean squared error of 6.8 ± 5.4 mm3. Further prediction analysis yielded a bias of 2.327.
Conclusion
Contrast-enhanced CT allowed in vivo tracking of skeletal muscle injury recovery in rat.
Funder
Agència de Gestió d’Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Cited by
2 articles.
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